Buy Cars and Trucks in Aloha, Oregon

Saab : 9-5 Aero 2002 Saab 95 Aero Wagon
Saab : 9-5 Aero 2002 Saab 95 Aero Wagon
$4,351.00 (21 Bids)
Time Left: 4h 7m
Chevrolet : El Camino 1965 El Camino 350 V8
Chevrolet : El Camino 1965 El Camino 350 V8
$3,500.00 (21 Bids)
Time Left: 5h 32m
Pontiac : Grand Am Grand Am 1998 pontiac grand am
Pontiac : Grand Am Grand Am 1998 pontiac grand am
$200.00
$1,700.00
Time Left: 7h 42m
Buick 1959 Buick Invicta Estate wagon and hardtop parts car
Buick 1959 Buick Invicta Estate wagon and hardtop parts car
$4,050.99 (13 Bids)
Time Left: 18h 29m
Chevrolet : Silverado 2500 2004 CHEVY SILVERADO 2500 HD - TAN
Chevrolet : Silverado 2500 2004 CHEVY SILVERADO 2500 HD - TAN
$12,000.00
$12,900.00
Time Left: 20h 48m
MG : T-Series Roadster 1954 MG-TF Roadster Remarkable Restoration
MG : T-Series Roadster 1954 MG-TF Roadster Remarkable Restoration
$20,600.00 (18 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 1h 44m
Pontiac 1961 Pontiac Ventura 4 door Hardtop
Pontiac 1961 Pontiac Ventura 4 door Hardtop
$6,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 1h 45m
Lincoln : Mark Series 1994 Lincoln Mark VIII Coupe
Lincoln : Mark Series 1994 Lincoln Mark VIII Coupe
$3,999.99 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 3h
Mercedes-Benz : 280 SLC 1976 Mercedes Benz SLC
Mercedes-Benz : 280 SLC 1976 Mercedes Benz SLC
$10,995.00
Time Left: 1d 4h 14m
BMW : 8-Series 850 CSI BMW 850 CSI   Built in the M Plant very Rare
BMW : 8-Series 850 CSI BMW 850 CSI Built in the M Plant very Rare
$23,000.00
$26,000.00
Time Left: 1d 5h 17m
Ford : Thunderbird 1995 thunderbird lx
Ford : Thunderbird 1995 thunderbird lx
$765.00
$1,350.00
Time Left: 1d 23h 13m
Dodge : Dart GT 1965 Dodge Dart GT  convertable
Dodge : Dart GT 1965 Dodge Dart GT convertable
$3,605.00 (8 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 16m
Other Makes 1948 anglia gasser
Other Makes 1948 anglia gasser
$10,100.00 (4 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 4h 41m
Maserati : Quattroporte Executive GT 2008 QUATTROPORTE
Maserati : Quattroporte Executive GT 2008 QUATTROPORTE
$42,100.00 (6 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 8h 57m

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Questions Related to aloha, oregon cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Is the crime rate increasing in Aloha Oregon?
Question:
I'm noticing a lot more police cars every day, I noticing more incidents on the news about stuff. I think I hear a house alarm down the block. Is crime starting to increase in Aloha Oregon? It's really sounding like it.


Answer:
Check with your police department. Some police departments have "crime maps" on line that show where crime occurs.

Is it Legal to Surreptitiously record Your encounter with Law Enforcment if they are recording you first?
Question:
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2011/1 0/if_an_oregon_police_officer_is.html - If an Oregon police officer is recording your traffic stop, it's legal to make your own recording of the encounter - Ever wish you had the words of that all-powerful traffic cop -- the one you thought was rude or just plain wrong -- recorded? The Oregon Court of Appeals ruled last week that a 33-year-old Cottage Grove man who did just that -- used his cell phone to surreptitiously record his encounter with a cop -- shouldn't have been convicted of a crime. The Eugene Police officer who pulled over Shane Neff had already told the motorist that he was recording their interaction with his in-car patrol camera. A majority of judges ruled that was enough notice, and Neff needn't announce to the officer that his phone also was capturing their conversation. Although the Court of Appeals' opinion simply interpreted the 56-year-old law's ambiguous language -- whether one person giving notice is enough -- the ruling is sparking debate over larger social policy questions. Do police performing their official duties in public places have a right to privacy? Should members of the public ever have to tell cops that their words could be played back for all to hear? "It's about whether people should have the right to record their public servants," said Bronson James, the Portland attorney who represented Neff before the Court of Appeals. "The whole issue is bubbling to the fore. I wouldn't be surprised to see some legislation at the next (Oregon) legislative session about it." The issue has spurred controversy nationwide, from Chicago to the Bay Area to Boston, where a lawyer sued police in federal court for violating his First and Fourth Amendment rights after they arrested him for using his cell phone to record what he thought was an excessively forceful struggle with a teen-age drug suspect. James said Neff, a 33-year-old dad, was doing nothing wrong on Nov. 4, 2008 when Eugene Officer Sam Ou ran Neff's license plate through his computer, then stopped Neff because he mistakenly believed Neff had a suspended license. The encounter ended in arrest when Ou noticed that Neff was recording the conversation. As in many states, Oregon's law originated decades before many started carrying their own personal recording devices: cell phones and especially smartphones that make it possible to record with a few taps on a screen. James, the attorney representing Neff, doesn't think the law was created to prohibit the public from covertly recording police during public encounters, but that's how state courts have applied the law. Three years ago, however, the Multnomah County District Attorney's Office declined to prosecute a man who video-recorded Portland police rousting a pair of suspected drug dealers outside the Portland Art Museum. And the city attorney's office advised the police bureau not to make arrests under the law, finding that the act of holding a video camera or a cell phone in plain sight is enough to inform officers of the recording. Last year, Beaverton's insurance company paid a $19,000 settlement to an Aloha man after an officer seized his cell phone and arrested him for recording the arrest of a friend at Valley Lanes Bowling Center. But drivers recording their encounters with police is specifically becoming more of an issue as in-car police cameras proliferate. Oregon State Police may have been the first in the state, rolling out their first systems in the early 1990s. Today, about half of OSP's 385 patrol cars are equipped with cameras. Washington County Sheriff's deputies plan to test their first in-car cameras next year. Beaverton police have two in-car camera systems, but hope to install more when budgets allow. The Clackamas County Sheriff's Office has equipped 42 patrol cars -- about half its fleet -- with cameras. The sheriff's office sent out a bulletin to deputies saying that the Court of Appeals doesn't support arresting individuals who covertly record them -- quid pro quo -- during traffic stops. The Eugene Police Department -- the agency that arrested the Cottage Grove man, Neff -- has decided in light of the recent debate nationwide, officers won't arrest anyone if their only perceived crime is secretly recording police. "We trust that our officers are doing their jobs professionally," said spokeswoman Jen McCulley. "And we understand there's a public interest in how our officers do their jobs."


Answer:
.... ALWAYS HAVE A RECORDER ON.... YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN (OR WHERE) YOU'LL RUN INTO A ROGUE COP. THE MORE EVIDENCE YOU HAVE..... THE MORE JUSTICE YOU CAN BRING BY PUTTING ROGUE COPS BEHIND BARS.