Buy Cars and Trucks in Portsmouth, Virginia

Infiniti : QX56 2007 INFINITY QX56
Infiniti : QX56 2007 INFINITY QX56
$23,900.00
Time Left: 2h 3m
Mercedes-Benz : 400-Series 420s 1997 Mercedes b 4d sdn
Mercedes-Benz : 400-Series 420s 1997 Mercedes b 4d sdn
$1,000.00
$2,800.00
Time Left: 1d 16m
Ford : Mustang GT 2011 FORD MUSTANG GT PREMIUM
Ford : Mustang GT 2011 FORD MUSTANG GT PREMIUM
$27,000.00
$30,700.00
Time Left: 1d 1h 57m
GMC : Suburban SLT Low Mileage  two owner
GMC : Suburban SLT Low Mileage two owner
$7,500.00
Time Left: 1d 22h 39m
Chevrolet : Camaro IROC I988 CAMARO IROC Z28
Chevrolet : Camaro IROC I988 CAMARO IROC Z28
$11,000.00
$20,000.00
Time Left: 2d 54m
Chevrolet : Corvette z06 2002 Corvette Z06 Modified
Chevrolet : Corvette z06 2002 Corvette Z06 Modified
$9,000.10 (24 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 4h 28m
Dodge : Dart GT 1965 Dodge Dart GT
Dodge : Dart GT 1965 Dodge Dart GT
$1,000.00 (8 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 8h 16m
Mazda : RX-7 truboII RX7 Beatiful new rebuild
Mazda : RX-7 truboII RX7 Beatiful new rebuild
$7,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 20h 56m
Ford : E-Series Van 2010 FORD E350 CARGO VAN IN VA
Ford : E-Series Van 2010 FORD E350 CARGO VAN IN VA
$15,500.00
Time Left: 3d 4h 10m
Willys : M38A1 1953 M38A1 CJ5 WILLYS MILITARY ARMY JEEP
Willys : M38A1 1953 M38A1 CJ5 WILLYS MILITARY ARMY JEEP
$6,999.00
$7,600.00
Time Left: 3d 5h 22m
MG : MGB MGB-GT 1969 MGB GT
MG : MGB MGB-GT 1969 MGB GT
$4,300.00 (14 Bids)
Time Left: 3d 5h 25m
Dodge : Ram Van Handicap lift Van.  47k Miles!!  A C!!
Dodge : Ram Van Handicap lift Van. 47k Miles!! A C!!
$1,800.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 3d 5h 36m
BMW : 3 Series Ci 2004 325 Ci convertible
BMW : 3 Series Ci 2004 325 Ci convertible
$8,600.00
$15,800.00
Time Left: 3d 6h 17m
Chevrolet : El Camino  PU  1972 chevrolet EL Camino beautiful
Chevrolet : El Camino PU 1972 chevrolet EL Camino beautiful
$6,600.00 (17 Bids)
Time Left: 3d 8h 32m
Ford : Mustang coupe 1966 Ford Mustang Coupe
Ford : Mustang coupe 1966 Ford Mustang Coupe
$9,000.00
$25,000.00
Time Left: 3d 8h 52m
Porsche : 911 2002 Carrera X51 Aero MKII
Porsche : 911 2002 Carrera X51 Aero MKII
$37,000.00
Time Left: 3d 23h 9m
Ford : F-250 XL 2008 FORD F250 XL REG CAB 4x2 IN VA
Ford : F-250 XL 2008 FORD F250 XL REG CAB 4x2 IN VA
$11,850.00
Time Left: 4d 2h 51m
Chevrolet : Camaro Z28 1997 Chevrolet Camaro
Chevrolet : Camaro Z28 1997 Chevrolet Camaro
$6,950.00
Time Left: 5d 2h 19m

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Questions Related to portsmouth, virginia cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Is owning a car necessary in Portsmouth, Virginia?
Question:
This question only applies to those that live in Portsmouth, VA or have lived there in the past 2-3 years or so. The reason I ask is because the military is going to ship me there for 4 years. I wanted to know if there's a lot of cars there or not. Thanks. Also, for those in the NAVY, let's say you want to vacation in the West Coast, will the NAVY pay to ship your car there while you fly to the West Coast and vice versa?


Answer:
1: The public transportation here in S.E. Virginia SUCKS! Bus service is one of the worst I've seen in the U.S. Just for example, in order to get to the Norfolk Naval Base from where I live, I'd have to drive 20 minutes to get a bus (leaving at 5:20 a.m.) that will get me to work before 6:30 a.m.! I once took the bus from D&S piers in Norfolk to First Colonial and Laskin Roads (21 miles) in Virginia Beach and it took me 3 /12 hours! MRSJVB is incorrect. Besides the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, there's the PORTSMOUTH NAVAL HOSPITAL and ST. JULIENS CREEK ANNEX bases. Down the road a piece is the Northwest Radio annex. 2. If you buy a car here in Navy town, DO NOT buy one from EAST LITTLE CREEK ROAD or CHARLIE FALKS, or any of those other yahoos. Go to a reputable dealer (I suggest for a used car, GREAT NECK AUTOS, which is out here in Va Beach). 3. No, the Navy will NOT ship your car for you to go on vacation. (USN retired 1965 - 85, in s.e. Va since 1976)

I've been wondering how much money I need to make to live comfortably. Any help?
Question:
I'm going to be a firefighter/Paramedic just like my parents. I got about 2 years left till I start my training and I'm currently a volunteer. In Portsmouth, Virginia, they start at 50k a year and Virginia Beach starts at 56k a year, for FF/EMT-Ps. Looking at the cost of living in Virginia and North-east North Carolina, Is 50-56k enough money to live well. I'm not asking for much, I just want a decent size house in a good neighborhood and a nice car like a Mustang. I also plan on doing ER technician part-time, and that will put my total pay at 75k a year. Is 50-56k a year enough? Ok. What I mean by decent house is like a one story ranch style home. I'm not a hige spender, I just want to know if 50k is enough in today's America to get by. What I mean by getting by is not having to worry alot about money problems, able to buy food, take care of family, have insurance on house, car, and health. and also to have some money to do some of the things you want to do.


Answer:
$50,000 is more than enough for a single person to live comfortably on, especially in that part of the country. You can easily qualify for a mortgage around $125,000 on that income, and your payments on that mortgage would be around $750--very good range for your income, assuming you don't have a ton of other debt. Of course, $50,000 might not be enough to have the life you want if you're trying to support a wife and family on top of yourself, especially if your wife didn't work. It can be done, especially if you don't saddle yourself with a lot of debt, but it'll be tight. I live in Dallas and make about $50,000. I own a $160000 condo right Uptown, I save 12% of my gross income, and I go out several times a week (i.e. I spend a good amount on food and wine). I'm by no means rolling in cash, but I am definitly comfortable. That said, $60,000 is a LOT more than $50,000. It can make a huge difference in your savings or disposible income. But rest assured. You're headed into a great career with growth potential where there'll be a ton of demand in the next few decades. Plus you can always do other things on the side to boost your income, or parlay your experience into some other branch of the medical field if you don't end up loving it.

What are bills that are necessary to pay when living on your own in Virginia?
Question:
I don't live on my own yet and Im planning on moving out next year. Of course, I want to know what I'm getting myself into before i actually get into it. I would like to know on average what type of living expenses and bills will need to be paid. Example: Apartment Rent ($500 maybe?), Utilities (what and what's not included?), Average groceries for one person, Car Insurance, Gas a week (automobile), cable, ETC. (add anything i left out please) I live in Virginia and i have seven cities to choose form...Hampton, Norfolk, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, New Port News, Chesapeake, and Portsmouth.


Answer:
You may need to pay for (some of these may be included, some may not, depending on the owner and what he/she pays for) rent, electric, gas, water, food, cleaning supplies, toiletries, furniture, dishes and cups, pots and pans, transportation (if your own car, gas, maintenance, insurance, tickets you may get), medical, dental, vision, clothing, washer/dryer, TV, cable/satellite, phone, computer, Internet access, emergency fund, and the list goes on and on. Once you have the one-time purchase items (furniture, dishes, pots/pans, etc.) a rough estimate is double the rent you pay for the month, and that's how much you need to get by. This doesn't include entertainment or an emergency fund, though, and does not include any credit cards or loans you may have to pay. It's not easy, and is why many young people have roommates to help with the cost of many of these items when they first move out of their parent's home.

Dumb Criminals. Star If You Like?
Question:
DUMB CRIMINALS Real Crimes Committed By Dumb Criminals Chicago: A man was wanted for throwing bricks through jewelry store windows and making off with the loot. He was arrested last night after throwing a brick into a Plexiglas window...the brick bounced back, hit him in the head and knocked him cold until the police got there. Portsmouth, RI: Police charged Gregory Rosa, 25, with a string of vending machine robberies in January when he: 1. fled from police inexplicably when they spotted him loitering around a vending machine and 2. later tried to post his $400 bail in coins. When Stan Caddell wanted to wash his Chevrolet, he backed the car into a foot of water in the Mississippi River at Hannibal, Missouri. When he got out to clean the car, it floated away. Police were able to retrieve the vehicle some distance downstream. According to an officer on the scene, no action would be taken against the driver because "you can't ticket a guy for being stupid..." Kentucky: Two men tried to pull the front off a cash machine by running a chain from the machine to the bumper of their pickup truck. Instead of pulling the front panel off the machine, though, they pulled the bumper off their truck. Scared, they left the scene and drove home. With the chain still attached to the machine. With their bumper still attached to the chain. With their vehicle's license plate still attached to the bumper. A bank robber in Bumpus, Tenn., handed a teller the following note: "Watch out. This is a rubbery. I hav an oozy traned on your but. Dump the in a sack, this one. No die packkets or other triks or I will tare you a new naval. No kwarter with red stuff on them, too." Dr. Creon V.B. Smyk of the Ohio Valley Educational Council says such notes are, lamentably, the rule. "Right across the board, we see poor pre-writing skills, problems with omissions, tense, agreement, spelling and clarity," he moaned. Smyk believes that the quality of robbery notes could be improved if criminals could be taught to plan before writing. "We have to stress organization: Make an outline of your robbery note before you write it," he said. "Some of the notes get totally sidetracked on issues like the make, model and caliber of the gun, number of bullets, etc., until one loses sight of the main idea -- the robbery." A lawyer defending a man accused of burglary tried this creative defense: "My client merely inserted his arm into the window and removed a few trifling articles. His arm is not himself, and I fail to see how you can punish the whole individual for an offense committed by his limb." "Well put," the judge replied. "Using your logic, I sentence the defendant's arm to one year's imprisonment. He can accompany it or not, as he chooses." The defendant smiled. With his lawyer's assistance he detached his artificial limb, laid it on the bench, and walked out. A man in Orange County Municipal Court had been ticketed for driving alone in the carpool lane. He claimed that the four frozen cadavers in the mortuary van he was driving should be counted. The judged ruled that passengers must be alive to qualify. A man was arrested for stealing a car. When he was taken to court for his arraignment the judge asked, how do you plead? Instead of saying guilty or not guilty the man said: "Before we go any further, judge, let me explain why I stole the car." The judge ruled in record time. A pair of Michigan robbers entered a record shop nervously waving revolvers. The first one shouted, "Nobody move!" When his partner moved, the startled first bandit shot him. After drinking a little too much, Stewart Butcher went to sleep on a West Virginia railroad track. A while later, something woke him-- a 15 car coal train. "I raised up," said Stewart, "and it knocked me out..." An Australian man accused of murdering his wife can't seem to get his story straight. June Mathew, John Rushton's second wife, testified that Rushton told her his first wife died of a heart attack, ran off with a Baptist minister after committing 55 acts of adultery, and drowned after being washed overboard. Rushton also claimed he was a nuclear physicist, a naval commander, and had been knighted for saving the Queen's life. Mathew, who was married to Rushton for five years, believed him because he was a "good talker..." but those pesky microtremors finally gave him away... An off-duty police officer in Newark, NJ, had a pistol-shaped cigarette lighter, which he had been using all night while drinking at a local tavern. After many hours and drinks, he apparently mistook his 32 revolver for the lighter. When he went to light his cigarette, he shot and killed John Fazzola, who was seated 5 stools away at the bar... An unidentified man in Buenos Aires pushed his wife out of an eighth-floor window but his plan to kill her failed when she became entangled in some power cables below. Seeing she was still alive, the man jumped and tried to land on top of her. He missed... Ann Arbor: The Ann Arbor News crime column reported that a man walked into a Burger King in Ypsilanti, Michigan at 7:50am, flashed a gun and demanded cash. The clerk turned him down because he said he couldn't open the cash register without a food order. When the man ordered onion rings, the clerk said they weren't available for breakfast. The man, frustrated, walked away. Arizona: A company called "Guns For Hire" stages gunfights for Western movies, etc. One day, they received a call from a 47-year-old woman, who wanted to have her husband killed. She got 4-1/2 years in jail. Arkansas: Seems this guy wanted some beer pretty badly. He decided that he'd just throw a cinder block through a liquor store window, grab some booze, and run. So he lifted the cinder block and heaved it over his head at the window. The cinder block bounced back and hit the would-be thief on the head, knocking him unconscious. Seems the liquor store window was made of Plexi-Glass. The whole event was caught on videotape. Baggy clothes may save your life: a 13-year-old boy in Belgrade, Yugoslavia fell 130 feet from his hi-rise apartment and survived with only minor injuries. Witnesses said Daniel Gurgus' baggy sweater caught tree branches on the way down... remember, kids, just say no to Spandex... Burglars in Larch Barrens, Md., tried to cut through a safe using a Laser Tag gun. Carlos Diaz of New York got 18 years to life for committing a series of robberies by pretending a zucchini hidden under his jacket was a gun... England: A German "tourist," supposedly on a golf holiday, shows up at customs with his golf bag. While making idle chatter about golf, the customs official realizes that the tourist does not know what a "handicap" is. The customs official asks the tourist to demonstrate his swing, which he does--backward! A substantial amount of narcotics was found in the golf bag. Germany: Oil of Olay no longer turning the trick for her, a woman decided that she would bathe in the milk of a camel (a modern-day Cleopatra). So she stole a camel from the local zoo (where *else* can you find a camel when you need one?) and transported it back to her house--where she realized that the camel's name was "Otto." (Editor's Note 2: She might not have gotten much milk from Otto, but she probably made a friend for life while trying to ...) In Bent Forks, Ill., kidnapers of ice-cube magnate Worth Bohnke sent a photograph of their captive to Bohnke's family. Bohnke was seen holding up a newspaper. It was not that day's edition and, in fact, bore a prominent headline relating to Nixon's trip to China. This was pointed out to the kidnapers in a subsequent phone call. They responded by sending a new photograph showing an up-to-date newspaper. Bohnke, however, did not appear in the picture. When this, too, was refused, the kidnapers became peevish and insisted that a photograph be sent to them showing all the people over at Bohnke's house holding different issues of _Success_ magazine. They provided a mailing address and were immediately apprehended. They later admitted to FBI agents they did not understand the principle involved in the photograph/newspaper concept. "We thought it was just some kind of tradition," said one. Educators agree that such mix-ups point to poor reasoning and comprehension skills, ignorance of current events, and failure to complete work in the time allotted. Indiana: A man walked up to a cashier at a grocery store and demanded all the money in the register. When the cashier handed him the loot, he fled--leaving his wallet on the counter. Industrial thieves broke into the Bilgetek plant in Canasta, Wash., by crossing a metal catwalk and then blew it up, having forgotten it was their only means of escape. Joseph Owens of Mount Pleasant, Michigan, didn't think police were listening to his complaints that someone was harassing him, so he came up with a brilliant plan. Owens convinced his friend to shoot him in the shoulder with a shotgun so police would take him seriously. After a trip to the emergency room, Owens faces up to four years in prison for filing a false police report...next time, a little higher and to the left... Lake City, Florida: Karen Lee Joachimi, 20, was arrested for robbery of a Howard Johnson's motel. She was armed with only an electric chainsaw, which was not plugged in. New York: As a female shopper exited a convenience store, a man grabbed her purse and ran. The clerk called 911 immediately and the woman was able to give them a detailed description of the snatcher. Within minutes, the police had apprehended the snatcher. They put him in the cruiser and drove back to the store. The thief was then taken out of the car and told to stand there for a positive ID. To which he replied, "Yes Officer, that's her. That's the lady I stole the purse from." Newark: A woman was reporting her car as stolen, and mentioned that there was a car phone in it. The policeman taking the report called the phone, and told the guy that answered that he had read the ad in the newspaper and wanted to buy the car. They arranged to meet, and the thief was arrested. Rustlers in Spavin, N.D., made off with three Saint Bernard dogs, a stationary bicycle and the visiting in-laws of a farmer, after having failed to correctly identify the valuable cattle on the premises.


Answer:
Love it, all the jokes are very funny, thanks :) Here's a star.

Did McCain crash more than planes ?? ?
Question:
For the past two months, a major American magazine and an allied news service have been engaged in a legal battle with the United States Navy over records that they believe show that John McCain once was involved in an automobile accident that injured or, perhaps, killed another individual. Vanity Fair magazine and the National Security News Service claim to have knowledge "developed from first-hand sources" of a car crash that involved then-Lt. McCain at the main gate of a Virginia naval base in 1964, according to legal filings. The incident has been largely, if not entirely, kept from the public. And in documents suing the Navy to release pertinent information, lawyers for the NS News Service allege that a cover-up may be at play. "Plaintiffs have also obtained documents showing that law enforcement officers were ordered back to the accident scene to retrieve personal physical effects. The Navy has never publicly acknowledged this information," one document reads. "This request involves federal government activity, as it addresses what may be an attempt by the Navy to protect by concealment the involvement of a former Navy officer, sitting Senator and Presidential candidate in a serious incident involving the injury or death of another human being." The first request for information concerning duty assignment logs to Portsmouth Naval Hospital -- where McCain was allegedly brought after the accident -- came in the form of a Freedom of Information Act request on August 28, 2008. The Navy acknowledged receipt of the request and advised that it had located the relevant information a few weeks later, only to deny the FOIA on grounds that it didn't prove an "imminent threat to the life or physical safety of an individual" or satisfy the criteria of "a breaking news story of general public interest." "The patient admission record logs that you seek are exempt from release," wrote G.E. Lattin, Deputy Assistant Judge Advocate General, "as information in personnel and medical files, as well as similar personal information in other files, that if disclosed to a requestor, other than the actual person in which the information is pertaining to or next of kin, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." NS News Service and Vanity Fair appealed the decision and asked for expedited treatment of the case, as the end of the presidential election loomed. But the Navy denied that request as well. "It appears to be a deliberate refusal to provide clearly releasable information concerning assignments to Portsmouth Naval Hospital," wrote legal representatives for the two news organizations. "Allowing the Navy to extend its time to respond beyond a date when the documentary facts of this matter would be available for public consideration prior to the national election on Tuesday, November 4, 2008 would violate the spirit, as well as the provisions of the FOIA." Staff for National Security News Service and the company's lawyer both refused to discuss the proceedings. And there are only parcels of information concerning the story that can be gleamed from the court documents. At a minimum it seems clear that Vanity Fair and NS News Service have launched an investigation "disclosing first-hand witnesses' recollection of an automobile accident in which then Lt. John S. McCain III was involved. Those witnesses specifically recall McCain's assignment to that [hospital] facility with the other person involved in the accident." This episode in McCain's life has, it seems, not been made public, and the plaintiffs suggest that the Navy may be attempting to actively restrict information about the incident. "The subject matter of the documents is a matter of current exigency to the American public," reads a document filed by legal representatives for the news service, "because the requester is preparing a current news report addressing whether the Navy continues to conceal the involvement of a Navy officer in a serious automobile accident in July 1964."


Answer:
If there's nothing to it, McCain, as "the actual person in which the information is pertaining to", could order the release of the information, or could obtain it and release it. This isn't like "Obama's Kenyan birth certificate" which may exist or may be the figment of someone's imagination, this is a series of documents acknowledged to exist by an official of the United States Government. Who is the real John McCain? The public has a right to know.

how long does the officer have to issue a citation?
Question:
(in virginia) i went outside one night at 3:30am to smoke a cigarette. since it was 3:30am i decided to take my pipe with me. as i was smokin my cigarette i see a cop car come to the corner so i hide my pipe in my pants. the cop stopped and asked if i had seen two kids walking around with a rifle. i said a rifle?!? and she replied yeah a rifle or a bb gun or something, they shot out a window around the corner in another part of the neighborhood. i said nope havent seen anyone, i just got out here to smoke a cigarette. she says ok and goes down the street. not wanting to draw attention to myself i didnt throw or take out the pipe. i figured she was going to turn left and go around the rest of the neighborhood. she then turns around and stops at the corner for a few seconds. i knew now that she was coming back and i couldnt do anything without her seeing me. so she pulls up and stops gets out and tells me one of the kids had on a red shirt. and i of coarse had to be wearing a red shirt. so she asked if i had any guns and i said no and she walked up to my car which i was standing in front of and looked threw the windows and saw nothing. then a male officer arrived and askes the same questions and asked if i had any guns on me and i said no i dont even got pockets and i lifted the left side of my shirt and said i have to clip my keys on and he probably asked can i search you but i didnt hear it so i never said no and he walks up and starts patin me down. i kind of froze because i didnt want to jerk away and act suspisious as to having a gun nor did i want to jerk away and have my pipe fall out. so i stood there and he just barely touched the pipe he took my arms and put them behind my back and lifts my shirt to see the pipe and the female cops says what u got, he said a bowl and she says oh thats nothin. he puts me in handcuffs. he asked if that was my car and if i had anything else in there or something. i said nope you can even look, its unlocked. knowing there was nothin in there i didnt care. and he searched and found nothing. and he put me in the back of his car and we waited for the female officer to come back with the person who saw the kids to identify me. he of coarse said no. so the male cop takes me out of cuffs. talks with his partner or w/e and then talks to me and says shes not a part of this n shes leavin. he then ask where i got the pot and i said portsmouth, he then says well do you know of anyone in chesapeake who sells and ive gotten it from. i said yeah i know people. and he said where, i said ive gotten it from point elizabeth before and he was interested and was like really where at cuz we got information about someone in that area, and still makin stuff up as i went, i said in the back somewhere. and then he ends up saying he didnt feel like writting a summons (its now past 4am) so heres what ill do. if u can feed me some information about anyone sellin anything, and it doesnt have to be pot it can be w/e, we can forget about this. because it was just bad luck u happened to be outside. (didnt i know that) he said he was gunna take my pipe and log it as evidence but wasnt going to put my name on it. and so its been a lil more than 4 weeks and i havent found any info on anything serious that i was comfortable tellin him. and i havent gotten anything in the mail about a court summons or nothin. i just wanna no how long i should worry about.


Answer:
LOL!!!! that is really funny. well not for you but it is kind of. and the cops have a long time that they can charge you. i got a summons one time for a bong that was found at my house 6 months later. and i think they can charge you at least a year later maybe more. for some reason the number 7 keeps popping in my head but i'm not for sure. anyway if he was going to take the pipe and log it as evidence he would have to put your name on it. and if he was asking about other cities that's not even his jurisdiction so it sounds like he took your pipe home and went and scored at one of the places you told him about LOL!!! i wouldn't worry about it to much. he would have told you he was going to turn it in to the prosecutor or something for them to decide to bring up charges or not. and lets say you do get charged. a charge for a pipe is going to bring you a little fine if it's your first charge. and if it's not then you may have to do some classes but you won't be going to jail or anything. next time smoke your pipe inside LOL!!!

is there any sort of "window of time" to show drivers license when stopped at a random checkpoint?
Question:
i live in virginia and came up to a random license checkpoint only 2 blocks from my home. i was driving my wifes car with her in it as well. the officer stopped us, along with many others asking for drivers license and registration. i had left my wallet at home as she was the one driving earlier. i gave the registration and her license to the officer, since mine was at home. he came back asking for my social number, which i reluctantly gave him. i told him i could send her, not 2 blocks down the road, to get my license, but he refused and gave me the ticket. now i have to take a day off work to appear at court because he said it was not pre-payable and that i had to be there... my main question is if there is any sort of "window of time" to show my information, since it was a random stop and not a violation stop. i know im reaching with this query but am trying to find a way to not take a day off. P.S. for reference purposes the city this took place in is Portsmouth.... the biggest drain on human intelligence, and cesspool of crack-induced half-a-tards...


Answer:
The laws of most states are pretty uniform in requiring that your operator's license be on your person if you are operating a vehicle. The officer is correct in challenging your lack of identity according to most police agency policies. Taking time out from his continuing duties while someone leaves to get required documentation and returning with it is discouraged for several reasons. The officer is working and should not be distracted from his/her duties. Another of these involves officer safety. Also most communities mandate the court appearance as a consequence for your not having the license on your persons. While you might talk your way out of a fine in front of a sympathetic judge, you have already paid the price by having to appear in court. This is specifically to reinforce the requirement that you keep your license on you. I am afraid that you will need to show up in court.

What are bills that are necessary to pay when living on your own in Virginia?
Question:
I don't live on my own yet and Im planning on moving out next year. Of course, I want to know what I'm getting myself into before i actually get into it. I would like to know on average what type of living expenses and bills will need to be paid. Example: Apartment Rent ($500 maybe?), Utilities (what and what's not included?), Average groceries for one person, Car Insurance, Gas a week (automobile), cable, ETC. (add anything i left out please) I live in Virginia and i have seven cities to choose form...Hampton, Norfolk, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, New Port News, Chesapeake, and Portsmouth.


Answer:


Did McCain crash more than planes ?
Question:
For the past two months, a major American magazine and an allied news service have been engaged in a legal battle with the United States Navy over records that they believe show that John McCain once was involved in an automobile accident that injured or, perhaps, killed another individual. Vanity Fair magazine and the National Security News Service claim to have knowledge "developed from first-hand sources" of a car crash that involved then-Lt. McCain at the main gate of a Virginia naval base in 1964, according to legal filings. The incident has been largely, if not entirely, kept from the public. And in documents suing the Navy to release pertinent information, lawyers for the NS News Service allege that a cover-up may be at play. "Plaintiffs have also obtained documents showing that law enforcement officers were ordered back to the accident scene to retrieve personal physical effects. The Navy has never publicly acknowledged this information," one document reads. "This request involves federal government activity, as it addresses what may be an attempt by the Navy to protect by concealment the involvement of a former Navy officer, sitting Senator and Presidential candidate in a serious incident involving the injury or death of another human being." The first request for information concerning duty assignment logs to Portsmouth Naval Hospital -- where McCain was allegedly brought after the accident -- came in the form of a Freedom of Information Act request on August 28, 2008. The Navy acknowledged receipt of the request and advised that it had located the relevant information a few weeks later, only to deny the FOIA on grounds that it didn't prove an "imminent threat to the life or physical safety of an individual" or satisfy the criteria of "a breaking news story of general public interest." "The patient admission record logs that you seek are exempt from release," wrote G.E. Lattin, Deputy Assistant Judge Advocate General, "as information in personnel and medical files, as well as similar personal information in other files, that if disclosed to a requestor, other than the actual person in which the information is pertaining to or next of kin, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." NS News Service and Vanity Fair appealed the decision and asked for expedited treatment of the case, as the end of the presidential election loomed. But the Navy denied that request as well. "It appears to be a deliberate refusal to provide clearly releasable information concerning assignments to Portsmouth Naval Hospital," wrote legal representatives for the two news organizations. "Allowing the Navy to extend its time to respond beyond a date when the documentary facts of this matter would be available for public consideration prior to the national election on Tuesday, November 4, 2008 would violate the spirit, as well as the provisions of the FOIA." Staff for National Security News Service and the company's lawyer both refused to discuss the proceedings. And there are only parcels of information concerning the story that can be gleamed from the court documents. At a minimum it seems clear that Vanity Fair and NS News Service have launched an investigation "disclosing first-hand witnesses' recollection of an automobile accident in which then Lt. John S. McCain III was involved. Those witnesses specifically recall McCain's assignment to that [hospital] facility with the other person involved in the accident." This episode in McCain's life has, it seems, not been made public, and the plaintiffs suggest that the Navy may be attempting to actively restrict information about the incident. "The subject matter of the documents is a matter of current exigency to the American public," reads a document filed by legal representatives for the news service, "because the requester is preparing a current news report addressing whether the Navy continues to conceal the involvement of a Navy officer in a serious automobile accident in July 1964."


Answer:
No.