A North Texas woman filed multiple reports with law enforcement against the moving company she used to relocate from California. She still doesn't have her furniture after they picked it up in mid-June.Earlier this week, Cascella interviewed with FOX 4 in her empty home. First National Van Lines promised a finished job and a full refund. Workers unloading threatened to leave with her belongings because FOX 4 was there on Friday but ultimately decided to complete the job.
"Always stand your ground," Cascella said. "They can continue doing this to other people. So stand your ground." Cascella’s new home is now starting to feel like a home, filled with all of the items from furniture to hand-written letters which make home complete. "Such an enormous sense of relief. We’ve been through a lot with and without each other, and then it all ends we end up together," she said. "It gets me through those hard times because he meant so much to me."The Better Business Bureau says there are scammers in the moving industry who price gouge, take belongings hostage and destroy goods.