Buy Cars and Trucks in Peoria, Arizona

Ford : Mustang Ford Mustang 5.0 V8 HO
Ford : Mustang Ford Mustang 5.0 V8 HO
$800.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 6h 58m
BMW : 3-Series 323is 1998 BMW 323is v6 manual
BMW : 3-Series 323is 1998 BMW 323is v6 manual
$2,025.00 (10 Bids)
Time Left: 13h 21m
Nissan : Murano 2009 Nissan Murano
Nissan : Murano 2009 Nissan Murano
$202.50
$17,400.00
Time Left: 14h 40m
Chevrolet : Silverado 1500 2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Z71
Chevrolet : Silverado 1500 2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Z71
$4,275.00
$13,900.00
Time Left: 14h 43m
Chevrolet : Tahoe LS 2006 Chevrolet Tahoe LS
Chevrolet : Tahoe LS 2006 Chevrolet Tahoe LS
$100.00
$18,400.00
Time Left: 14h 45m
GMC : Yukon SLE 2009 GMC Yukon
GMC : Yukon SLE 2009 GMC Yukon
$103.50
$24,800.00
Time Left: 14h 52m
Dodge : Nitro SLT 2007 DODGE NITRO
Dodge : Nitro SLT 2007 DODGE NITRO
$8,600.00 (20 Bids)
Time Left: 16h 17m

Sponsored Links


Questions Related to peoria, arizona cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Whats the best highest paying job for a teenager in Peoria, Arizona?
Question:
Im 15 and i need a job for the summer so that I can save up to pay for most of my car payments/insurance. Im looking into Mcdonalds... but how much do they pay? and i heard taco bell hires 15 year olds also? Frankly I'd rather not work in a fast food restaurant and would like to work instead in a normal restaurant, grocery store, or even a cashier at a retail store or something... whoever provides good pay, or even hires 15 year olds for that matter, I'd love to hear about! Thanks!! :D (And yes I'm also looking around myself... so dont think Im just some lazy teen who wants a job for money to spend on crap. I'm a straight A student-in all honors and aims classes- involved in after school clubs and sports, and ranked 1 in my class) so please help me out.. Thanks!


Answer:
As you're under 16, federal law says you can only work 3 hours a day when school is in session and 8 hours a day on the weekend. There are strict laws regarding breaks and meal times even after you are 16. Most places don't want that headache of dealing with minors and potential fines, so they don't hire them. Most places will start a minor out at minimum wage (I think it's 7.35) or at the most ten to twenty cents above it. It is possible you can get a job landscaping, but you may not be able to depending on chemical or equipment used. Fast food and some grocery stores will hire minors to push carts or make food. Fast foods usually will consider it, but they prefer older employees because they can work them longer and in more varied shifts. Normal restaurants will avoid minors till they are 16 and even then it can be a hassle if they sell wine. Cashiers usually prefer 18 and over for alcohol purchases. Small retail stores will probably avoid hiring you due to break issues. Family-owned businesses and fast food are your best bet. Next best bet will be trying some chain grocery stores but not the larger ones because they start hiring at 16 usually.

Can the police seize your car in arizona if drugs are found in it? I also need sources.?
Question:
I have a family member that was aressted for dui last night if they found drugs can they seize his car, this happend in peoria, az?


Answer:
Yes they can - under RICO laws, they can seize the property then use it or sell it, the Funds are then given to the law Enforcement agencys involved. You can appeal to the Maricopia County attorneys office if the owner of the vehicle is unaware or had no way of knowing that the drugs were there. Otherwise the vehicle is gone. . By the way, the police can seize any property that is involved in the of drugs such as you house, land , boat or whatever

Has anyone ever been to Seven Springs in Arizona?
Question:
I wanted to take my bf to Fossil Creek, but since we had that rain the dirt road may be a little too much for my car to handle, so my dad suggested Seven Springs. I haven't gone since I was wayyy little. Is it a nice, serene, beautiful area? I live in Peoria, so going up there would only be about an hour and a half drive, we're in college so we get out of class tomorrow by about 12:30- we have a lot of time, hahaha. :]


Answer:
Yes, several times. Really beautiful area and definitely worth the drive. Here is some good info: http://www.azcentral.com/travel/drives/articles/2008/02/ 22/20080222road0221.html Have fun!!

Grants For Teen Moms In Arizona?
Question:
What kind of grants to they have in Arizona for teenage mothers? Im 18 years old with two kids. Im living with family in Peoria/Glendale and just recently enrolled into college... trying to take baby steps to getting my own car ; next will be an apt. Help, no smart answers please. Well I'm unsure if you have kids or not but when you have 2 under the age of "2" taking the bus to multiple appointments, child care, school, and many other things is pretty difficult without your own transportation.


Answer:
Your college should have a financial aid office -- that'd be the first place to ask about this sort of thing. A car? Why? Unless the public transit is useless -- you save a tonne by living in a place where it doesn't go, more than the cost of a car -- a car is not a great thing for a student to have; I would suck it up and bus it.

Traffic Accident- What will happen to my license?
Question:
So before I begin telling the story of what happened, I am 16 years old and got my license on June 22nd. My 19 year old friend was in the car with me, and this occurred in Peoria, Arizona. We were both driving to my cello lesson and I was driving about 5-10 over the speed limit and I was going to turn right. I didn't give myself enough time to stop and I realized that soon I was coming close to hitting the car in front of me. I tried slamming down harder but it was too late, and I bumped into the person in front of me. There is minimal damage to the other person's car, as the officer described it. I checked the front of my car and there wasn't any damage that I could see. When the officer came to my house, she said that some of the paint was cracked. She did point it out to me, they looked like spiderweb cracks on the front of my car. The mistake that I made was leaving the scene of the accident and speeding off. In the end, I decided to turn onto the freeway and hope that the guy would follow me onto the freeway and we could both pull over and I could apologize. But, I unfortunately made the mistake of leaving and then he saw me turning onto the freeway and got my license number before I got on and I didn't get to apologize to him like I was planning on doing. I really don't need people telling me how irresponsible I am and how 16-year-olds shouldn't be driving, I just need some information. He says I was going about 100 trying to speed away from him, but I was about about 60-65 to try to get away. I then realized that I really should pull over, but he just left and called the police instead. I got two tickets, after the officer came to my house. One is "Leaving the scene of an accident of an attended vehicle" and the second one is "Failure to control vehicle to avoid collision" What I'm wondering is, when I'm appearing before the judge, is there anything I can do or say to lessen the punishment that I will be receiving? I realize I made a huge mistake, and I need to think things through before I go through with them. I am definitely going to be a more responsible driver after this, this was the huge wake-up call that I needed to learn that driving is a privilege that I have. I appreciate any comments or suggestions.


Answer:
Such things are very common to happen at your age. You shouldn't feel that bad as it can happen to anyone. Even the best drivers get into accidents. Running away was perfectly natural and it is not a big crime. You have explained it very well here, you just need to do the same with the judge. You should tell him, that you got so much terrified and confused that you couldn't decide what to do and as it was the first time that you encountered an accident you opted to run away which was a stupid and unintentionally wrong decision. Best of luck for your appeal! Be confident and tell them the whole story without getting frightened.

i did 91mph in a 45, im 17 years old, been driving for about 1 year and 1/2?
Question:
i got radar-ed doing 91 mph in a 45 zone last night on grand avenue in Peoria Arizona, i got charged with a class 3 misdemeanor in Arizona for criminal speeding 28-701-02, i got arrested and booked but then they drove me home because my parents didn't pick up the phone, this is my first offense and I'm 17 years old, my car got impounded, but my car is under my dads name and so is the insurance. what is most likely to happen in court? how high will the insurance rate go if we payed 30 a month before this? and how long will my license get suspended for if I've been driving since November 2009 and today is march 2011? by the way, when i got arrested, the officer didnt read me my miranda rights, all he said was, "if you dont act like a dick to me, you wont stay the night and jail and we'll call mommy to come pick you up" does that mean anything?


Answer:
The short answer is to talk to a lawyer... but you can also try Google. A quick search on your charge revealed the following from AZ Gov site: You are likely facing a 30 day suspension of your license, attendance of a driver's safety course, up to $500 in fines and another $300 in additional assessments (plus the costs of getting the car out of impound and the cost of the driver's safety course), and up to 30 days in jail. As for the insurance - your rates will either go up (way up) or you will simply be dropped. You may be paid for 30 months, but any action will probably happen much sooner than that (time to start reading the policy and see what the company's obligations are... they will make any changes as quick as they can). An officer is not required to read you any rights when arresting you... but if you happened to make any statements to the officer that incriminated yourself, you can probably make a case for not having them presented as evidence. However they will not bother with any statements you made and instead rely on the radar data and the expert testimony of the officer. Though it sounds like he was pretty nice to you under the circumstances.

Help with baseball (spring training) in PHX, ARIZONA please.?
Question:
Okay, some questions & background info. I'll be driving in from Las Vegas & thusly will have a car. Will be picking up a friend from the airport (there in phx). Most likely stay 3 nights (maybe just 2) depending on $ situation. I've been to PHX a few times, but this was a decade ago. Budget isnt huge. Where to stay? Is downtown dificult to navigate, park, etc. The biggest cost of them all will be lodging. I'm used to places like days inn, holiday inn express, fairfield, clarion. Needs to be safe, clean. Doesnt need to be fancy. Suggestions? Also, what about booking lodging and tickets? Do it now? Cant remember when tickets become available (buying direct)? But, some ticket joints like stubhub already have offerings available i guess. Is it true that games sell out often? I want to see Seattle for sure (for suzuki). I've actually been to the stadium in Peoria. Is that still where SEA plays? Restaurant suggestions? We both like mexican food. For the most part our $ is going to be dedicated to: tix, lodging, food & that's about it. Thank you.


Answer:
Your M's share the complex with my Padres. This is the address with some watered down directions: Peoria Sports Complex 16101 N. 83rd Ave Peoria, AZ 85382 Driving Directions: Take either I-10 or I-17 to Loop 101(Agua Fria Freeway) Take Loop 101 West, if traveling on I-17, or Loop 101 North if traveling on I-10. Exit Bell Road east (exit 14) Turn south on 83rd Avenue Peoria Sports Complex is approximately one-quarter mile down on the east side of 83rd Avenue. This shows a lot of hotels in the area. http://local.yahoo.com/results?stx=hotel&csz=16101%20N.%20 83rd%20Ave.%2C%20Peoria%2C%20az%20 On Bell Road there are a ton of eateries. Many Mexican food joints. When should you book? Well I would say to book your hotel ASAP. You can buy your tickets a little later if you need to. The reason I say this is that there are so many Snowbirds coming to Phoenix in the winter and spring that they really take up a lot of the rental rooms. I'd say that the valley's population increases by almost 20% this time of year. You can really tell by the drop in traffic congestion when they leave.

What is your reaction to Undocumented couple leave SB 1070 behind?
Question:
A white Ford pickup with Arizona plates is driving north on U.S. 191 headed for the Utah border. Afraid of encountering police, the family inside is traveling at night. The pickup's headlights cut through a sea of darkness. The family is in a hurry to get out of Arizona, to get away from the state's harsh new immigration law. The pickup crosses into Utah at 11:59 p.m. Luis Sanchez breathes a sigh of relief as his wife, Marlen Ramirez, keeps driving. Both are undocumented immigrants from Mexico. "Look," he says. "We are here. We have arrived in Utah." They have made it safely out of Arizona, past the Maricopa County sheriff's deputy they saw as they were leaving Surprise and past the highway patrol cars they saw along Interstate 17 between Phoenix and Flagstaff. They still have a long way to their final destination: Pennsylvania. There will be engine troubles along the way. And more police. And frayed nerves. But the hardest part of the nearly 2,700-mile journey will be the end. Their final destination is where starting their lives over begins. Feeling like prisoners Luis and Marlen, both 33, lived in Arizona for more than 15 years. They are from the same small town, Xaltianguis, in southern Mexico, but they met while living at the same West Valley apartment complex. Luis was 17 when he crossed the border illegally near Douglas. Marlen was 16 when she jumped a fence near Nogales. Both came looking for work. Their three children are U.S. citizens because they were born in Arizona. The oldest, Luis Jr., is a quiet 13-year-old. Vanessa, 10, wears glasses and loves to talk. The baby, Christian, is 2. Lawyers have told Luis and Marlen that they do not qualify for legal residency. Luis has washed dishes at a restaurant on Grand Avenue, at a retirement home in Peoria and at a restaurant in Sun City West. For the past four years, he worked as a landscaper for a company that maintains office buildings in the West Valley. He earned $9.80 an hour. Marlen is a stay-at-home mom. Luis got his jobs using fake papers. He has managed to keep working despite the recession and Arizona's employer-sanctions law, which have made it much harder for illegal immigrants to get jobs. The couple started thinking about leaving Arizona when Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio began conducting his crime sweeps two years ago, saturating largely Latino neighborhoods with deputies, stopping vehicles for minor traffic violations and arresting illegal immigrants. The couple said the sweeps made them feel like prisoners. They used to enjoy spending Sundays at the park. But to avoid the police, they started staying home as much as possible. The day after Gov. Jan Brewer signed Arizona's new immigration law on April 23, Luis and Marlen decided to leave. They are not alone. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of families have fled Arizona, abandoning homes and apartments in already struggling neighborhoods. Many more are planning to leave. Some have returned to Mexico. Many are relocating to neighboring states, many of which may soon try to adopt laws similar to Arizona's. Luis and Marlen picked Pennsylvania. They have relatives there who say there is plenty of work. Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/2010/06/27 /20100627arizona-immigration-law-leaving-state.html#ixzz0s2T5dCfk


Answer:
Great...two more law breakers coming to my state,with their anchors in tow so my tax dollars can pay for their education. Hopefully PA passes a similar bill in the future. They aren't going to go home,they are just going to relocate to another state so they can continue with the perks. There is not plenty of work in PA. Guess they'll be applying for welfare for their kids as well as food stamps and government housing.

Doesn't crap like this make you ANGRY??!!?
Question:
Article Most Popular Change Type Size Judges who ignore no-bail law may as well give you the finger Laurie Roberts Republic columnist Mar. 21, 2007 12:00 AM It's now been 17 days since Jocabed Dominguez-Torres was arrested and accused of getting drunk, running a red light and killing a 20-year-old Peoria man. Seventeen days since the courts were notified that she's in this country illegally and thus can't be released from jail under a new law approved by voters. So what, you might ask, have our judges and commissioners done to comply with the overwhelming will of the people? They set bail. Then they reconsidered. And lowered her bail. advertisement In judicial speak, I think they just gave Arizona voters the finger. It's been just over two weeks since Scott and Patty Miller lost their only son, Chris, and were ushered into the court system. Their reaction thus far? "Complete dismay and total loss of confidence," Scott told me Tuesday. "For us to have gone through the last two weeks trying to deal with the grieving process all the while having to fight the legal system just to do what the voters said was the right thing to do to me is just unconscionable." Chris Miller was killed just after 2 a.m. on March 4 when Peoria police say Dominguez-Torres, 22, ran a red light and crashed into the car in which he was riding. Her blood-alcohol level was 0.20 percent, 2 1/2 times the legal limit. Peoria police notified court officials that she's here illegally and that she admitted to buying forged resident and Social Security cards on the streets of Phoenix. Yet Commissioner Kathleen Mead set her bond at $150,000. This, despite Proposition 100. You remember Prop. 100. It's a new law that denies bond in cases such as this to people here illegally. It passed last November in every county of the state. It passed by the widest margin of any proposition on the ballot. It passed because 78 percent of this state's voters decreed that it shall be the law of the land. Just not, apparently, in Maricopa County Superior Court. After Mead set Dominguez-Torres' bond, a court spokeswoman explained to me that commissioners can't deny bond on the say-so of the police or even the suspect. They must get word from an official source, she said, which is tough given that bail must be set within 24 hours of an arrest and the people in Immigration and Customs Enforcement who could give the high sign don't work weekends. Mead had to set Dominguez-Torres' bond on a Sunday. The next day, March 5, the courts got that official word from ICE when they put an immigration hold on Dominguez-Torres. "I don't know how much more official we can get," ICE spokeswoman Lauren Mack told me. Yet five days later, Commissioner Michael Barth lowered the bond to $50,000. On Monday, a Maricopa County prosecutor asked the court's presiding criminal judge, James Keppel, to change Domiguez-Torres' status to non-bondable, pointing out that our state Constitution now requires it. Keppel's response: "I'm not the Court of Appeals." He's holding a hearing Thursday morning to decide whether he has the authority to overturn Barth's bond. No word on whether anyone in the court system is worried about whether they have the authority to overturn voters. Neither Keppel nor the court's presiding judge, Barbara Mundell, returned calls to explain how the arbiters of law can just ignore it. However, courts spokeswoman J.W. Brown e-mailed me to let me know that judges are sworn to follow the law. "Several times each week, they order individuals charged with serious felonies be held without bond," she wrote, "when information presented to the court shows the proof is evident or the presumption is great that the person committed the alleged offense and is in the U.S. illegally." And yet Dominguez-Torres remains in jail on that $50,000 bond. If her family puts up $5,000, she'll be taken by ICE to a detention center, and if she doesn't fight deportation, she could be back in Mexico by April Fools' Day. Fitting, don't you think? Sorry some of you don't have the attention span of a TWO YEAR OLD when it comes to reading!! Peoria is in Arizona. And while there are many crimes committed by legal Americans, those committed by ILLEGAL aliens are PREVENTABLE crimes that should NEVER have happened in THIS country!! to "mexican american "this was NOT form an "anti-illegal website"!! It's in today's on-line nedition of the Arizona Republic newspaper!!! Try READING the news sometimes!! You MIGHT learn something!! to 'summermoon dancer" I don't like it when ANY child is molested or murdered!! 1. I didn't KNOW about this happening, so don't go saying that i wouldn't care!!!!!! 2. The person that did this was mentally handicapped!!(his parents/guardians should be held responsible) 3. That STILL does NOT alter the fact that ILLEGALS have NO business being in this country,committing crimes against OUR citizens!!!


Answer:
It is stupid how the only thing these anti illegal websites can provide is stories about the worst then compare it to their best. To the poster of the question: I know you would love nothing more than to see all illegals deported or even dead, but trust me, we are not leaving that easily. A mass deportation would cause huge riots ten times worse than those in L.A. By the way: I'm not saying she should be pardoned or anything like that. She did a crime and should be punished. What makes me angry is the fact that people like you dig up stories like these and then say all "illegals" are like that. Edit: I think DAR has it mixed up, it's American Citizens ( mostly white americans) that seem to get off scott free. For example a while ago there was a case where a white teenager and his friends were arrested for breaking into a school and causing 40,000 dollars in damages. What do you think would have happened if he had been black or hispanic. They would have fined him the 40,000 dollars plus jail time. What did they do to the kid? 2,000 dollars and no jail time, not even a suspension from what i heard.

Given his alleged belief in Islam, where in the Qur'ran is the killing of his daughter justified?
Question:
These killings are not in the past, it is today and all over the world. What is the Qur'ranic basis for this horror to which women are subjected? Why is it most often women that are killed? Men seemed to be allowed their dalliance, but not women. PEORIA, Ariz. — Authorities say a 20-year-old woman from Iraq whose father allegedly hit her with his car in a Phoenix suburb died from her injuries. Noor Faleh Almaleki had been in a local hospital since Oct. 20. Peoria police spokesman Mike Tellef says she died Monday. Family members say Faleh Hassan Almaleki believed his daughter had become too Westernized and was not living according to his traditional Iraqi values. Faleh Almaleki fled after the attack but was arrested Thursday when he arrived at Atlanta's airport, where he was sent from the United Kingdom after authorities denied him entrance. He was returned to Arizona last weekend. Tellef says the charges will be upgraded in light of his daughter's death. This question is regarding one specific act of murder by a father in Arizona. It does not judge all members in any religion. It asks for information on where this father got the idea that his religion condones the killing of one that believes differently than he does. I do not need to be schooled in any other religion's books or beliefs, that just begs the issue and is intolerant. http://www.islam-watch.org/SyedKamranMirza/honor_kill ing.htm


Answer:
I don't know where it is but I've always thought that the Qu'ran and it's religion is a heartless and unforgiving religion. They do these things amongst themselves and they insist we infidels adopt Sharia Law into our own countries. They want these laws of Islam to be world wide and when the demographics are strong enough they will at first insist that they have the right to sharia law amongst themselves and as the religion grows stronger the demographics will allow them to make those laws possible globally. Now this could take a hundred years to birth and convert that many Muslims but trust me. Right now? They are looking forward to a universal Caliphate to run the world. We are allowing it to happen in increments. Just look at Eurabia, and Londonstan and you can see what I'm saying. It is happening now as we live and breathe here in North America and you can trust them to slowly infiltrate our social order by insisting on their rights in a politically correct atmosphere while ignoring our rights... As for where it says the men have their rights to do that I don't know, but I do know that they would be happy to point it out to you and the women and they do believe that they have a right to do this. They firmly believe it and we are in the wrong to stop them as far as they are concerned.