Buy Cars and Trucks in Bellevue, Washington

Ford : Taurus SE 2006 Ford Taurus SE
Ford : Taurus SE 2006 Ford Taurus SE
$3,750.00
Time Left: 7h 30m
MG : MGB 1965 MG MGB convertible
MG : MGB 1965 MG MGB convertible
$8,200.00 (15 Bids)
Time Left: 13h 44m
Willys 1960 willys pickup
Willys 1960 willys pickup
$1,025.00
$2,550.00
Time Left: 17h 36m
Toyota : Land Cruiser FJ-40 FJ-40,  FJ40
Toyota : Land Cruiser FJ-40 FJ-40, FJ40
$11,100.00
$22,000.00
Time Left: 1d 8h 56m
Audi : A8 A8L 2005 Audi A8L - Fantastic Example!
Audi : A8 A8L 2005 Audi A8L - Fantastic Example!
$3,550.00
$20,995.00
Time Left: 1d 18h 6m
Chevrolet hot rod
Chevrolet hot rod
$20,100.00 (2 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 19h 17m
Mercury : Cougar 1968 Mercury Cougar
Mercury : Cougar 1968 Mercury Cougar
$3,050.00
$7,900.00
Time Left: 1d 19h 22m
Chevrolet : Bel Air 150 210 BELAIR 1956 CHEV BELAIR HARDTOP
Chevrolet : Bel Air 150 210 BELAIR 1956 CHEV BELAIR HARDTOP
$25,100.00 (11 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 15h 20m
Ford : Thunderbird 2002 Ford Thunderbird Custom With Porthole Top
Ford : Thunderbird 2002 Ford Thunderbird Custom With Porthole Top
$14,101.00 (21 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 16h 32m
Chevrolet : Camaro 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Rally Sport
Chevrolet : Camaro 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Rally Sport
$19,100.00 (14 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 16h 56m

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Questions Related to bellevue, washington cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Finally! Washington state doing what should have been done a long time ago. What do you think?
Question:
State cracks down on fake IDs Some applicants for a new driver's license will have to show proof of residency By VANESSA HO SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF Starting next week, if you want a new driver's license and don't have a Social Security number, you'll have to bring proof of state residency. The change is part of a crackdown on ID scams by the Department of Licensing, which was plagued earlier this year by an alleged crime ring that sold licenses to undocumented immigrants. The ring supposedly included a DOL employee in Bellevue. Washington currently asks applicants for proof of identity and a Social Security number. If someone doesn't have a Social Security number, the department allows an applicant to declare Washington residency in an affidavit. As of Nov. 8, those affidavits won't be sufficient. Anyone without an Social Security number will have to show proof of residency, such as a utility bill or car-insurance policy card. "This is going to go a big step further. It's going to make it much more difficult to engage in fraud at the counter," said Tony Sermonti, a spokesman for the Department of Licensing. He said the department will verify the documents while issuing applicants a piece of paper that authorizes them to drive for 60 days. That's different from the current temporary license, which looks like the real thing and is generally valid for ID purposes. "For many of the people that engage in this fraud, this piece of paper would essentially be worthless to them," Sermonti said. "So we expect that this move will really clamp down on the flow of people coming here to get a Washington license fraudulently." He said the changes are a continuation of the department's efforts to stop licensing fraud. Sermonti didn't have figures on ID scams, but said the number of people saying they don't have a Social Security number had risen in recent years. Of the state's 20,000 monthly applications for a new license, about 20 percent have no social security number. "It's a big number, and it's increasing," Sermonti said. About three weeks ago, the department began applying its facial recognition program to all licenses. That's a program that studies the mathematical proportions of people's faces and flags licenses with similar images. Previously it was used only for "enhanced" driver's licenses that allow people to travel to Canada and Mexico without a passport. http://www.seattlepi.com/local/429605_driverslicense .html?source=rss


Answer:
I agree, it's about time. I think the social security card, a national employment card, to be upgraded. Nothing has been done with this card since its inception in 1937. By using biometrics, the card will become tamper-proof, and identity fraud will be greatly reduced. It's not brain surgery. Once you dry up the jobs for illegal immigrants in this country, you will dry up the majority of this problem. This is not only a border problem, but an illegal employment problem. If the federal government had passed E-verify, we would not be talking about Arizona trying to address this issue on their border. The Democrats will hijack the illegal immigration issue and pass the "DREAM Act" regardless of American objections. ---- The Act will allow illegals who have lived in America to obtain a green card after they attend college or serve in the military. This is nothing more than an amnesty program that gives citizenship to these illegal immigrants. They will most definitely try to pass this, because several congressmen stated while in Mexico that "they were going to push amnesty after the November election." It will probably be passed because the Democrats in power want it. The mentality in Washington right now is that if they lose the majority after the 2010 elections, then they will put forth whatever they want. This is pretty scary since they are going to do what they want despite public opinion being against it. The "DREAM Act" is sending the wrong signal that the way you become an American is to break the law. o_O

Have you ever out witted a crook? How smart is this man?!?
Question:
BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON: A man in Washington state made sure a pair of burglars did not get away with his three flat-screen televisions - he moved their getaway car. Patrick Rosario was in the basement of his Bellevue home on Tuesday when he heard the burglars upstairs. The Seattle Times says the 32-year-old Rosario, who had been laid off from his job as a Washington Mutual bank manager, called police while he sneaked out of the house. He saw a white van sitting in front of his house with the motor running and the keys in the ignition, and he got in and drove it to a friend's house. Police say the burglars left the televisions, a laptop computer and a jewellery box by the door and took off on foot. The sheriff's office said no arrests had been made.


Answer:
LOL This reminds me of a time when I was 18 yo. My mum woke me up in the middle of he night to say there was a man in the kitchen. It seemed we had gone to bed and left the back door unlocked. We were just two women in the house alone, but I was unfazed by that and ran into the kitchen waving a big candlestick that we had. This guy was fast asleep on our kitchen floor!!! I woke him up with my foot, ranted and raved like a banshee at him and whacked him with he candlestick!!! He was blind drunk and has gone into the wrong house, and he was far more scared than I was. He left as fast as his drunken legs would let him. : - )) Not really a burglar but could have been just as nasty!!!

Anyone think this is odd or somewhat funny?
Question:
Ok, so I went to the mall in Bellevue, Washington to meet Pete Wentz with my bff. When we went there over 1000 fans, boys and girls, were lined up to meet him. He came 30 minutes late and left a whole freaking hour early! He only signed autographs and talked to 250 people! I was so crushed. I met a couple people that were cool but others were decked out in Hollister..aka losers. Then, when we were leaving, I was pretty much crying. Then, We were in an alley behind the mall, and my friend was like, Is that Ashlee Simpson? To my belief, she was walking right near our car! I rolled down the window as a joke and yelled HI ASHLEE!! She looked me right in the eyes and waved hi and smiled! She was by herself and a body guard with no crowds. Later I screamed we love you! Turns out the person you hate can have a funny affect on your day! i am 13 by the way so fun for me! pete wentz was a total @$$ but I will get over it, maybe...


Answer:
That is neat

Buying the first scooter?
Question:
Hello, I'm thinking to buy my first scooter due to the gas price issue. Do you think it might be a good idea to use scooter instead of me CRV car? I live in Washington state, bellevue area. I already have Honda CRV. My work and school is very close to my house. It's about 10 minutes driving distance (about 5 miles). I heard from the news and read a few comments of getting scooter. It can go for 100 miles per gallon. I hope if I drive scooter instead of my car, I will save the gas (at least I will help the world save the gas). On the other hands, I'm considering of my safety too. I don't have garage to park, just a parking spot from my apartment and it's pretty safe. From my house to work, speed limit is between 35 - 60 mph. Should I buy scooter and use it instead of my CRV. If yes, do u have any recommendation for me to buy my first scooter? I've been researching for scooters and Vespa is number one in my mind now but I'm not sure which model I should buy.


Answer:
all i can say is honda

Anyone think this is funny?
Question:
Ok, so I went to the mall in Bellevue, Washington to meet Pete Wentz with my bff. When we went there over 1000 fans, boys and girls, were lined up to meet him. He came 30 minutes late and left a whole freaking hour early! He only signed autographs and talked to 250 people! I was so crushed. I met a couple people that were cool but others were decked out in Hollister..aka losers. Then, when we were leaving, I was pretty much crying. Then, We were in an alley behind the mall, and my friend was like, Is that Ashlee Simpson? To my belief, she was walking right near our car! I rolled down the window as a joke and yelled HI ASHLEE!! She looked me right in the eyes and waved hi and smiled! She was by herself and a body guard with no crowds. Later I screamed we love you! Turns out the person you hate can have a funny affect on your day! i am 13 by the way so fun for me! pete wentz was a total @$$ but I will get over it, maybe... If I did meet Pete I would have died...but today I hate him!


Answer:
hehe kinda funny but not really at least u got to see some kind of celeb that day! (but itwould be 1,000 times better if it was pete!

Is it possible for a out-of-state student to pay for this amount of rent with this much money>?
Question:
Im thinking heavily about moving to Seattle, Washington (or Bellevue, WA). The minimum wage there is $8.07; a student working 40 hours a week making min. wage would earn around $1300. Rent for a small apartment there is nearly $600 at the least. Is it feasible for me to think I can leave by myself (w/o a car) with just $700 left over each month?


Answer:
Depends on how smart you manage your money, figure in how much you eat, internet, gas bill, and other utilities. For me, my share of the gas bill is about 50 a month, but will be going up soon when its gets even colder. I work at a restaurant so one of my meals is free every day i work and it really helps save. Electricity is usually cheap, less than 10 bucks a month. Water and garbage end up being about 30-40 a month. and internet is like 40 bucks if your going on your own. And then a cell phone if you have one too. All in all I spend about an additional 100-200 a month on living expenses. You should be fine

16th bday ideas for a guy?
Question:
ok so i am turning 16 and will mostlyike have a car b4 my birthday but will not have my license yet. my birthday is late december and i do have a few friends that could drive. i live in bellevue seattle area of washington. i dont wanna spend a lot of $$ and under 20 people. i kinda want my pary to fall on winter vacation (december 18+) some ideas i had were. if i could i would also do it after my birthday so i could drive, big boat to seattle fire works off boat go get dinner limo pick up from school with friend big happy birthday sign in front that says happy birthday rent a movie theater and hotel go to huskies game basketball rent a club hotel room with 4 friend after any idea above


Answer:


I got a ticket for negligent driving in the second degree. Can someone answer a couple of questions for me?
Question:
Okay first off, I am not looking for a response telling me to "slow down" or "balls up" and pay the fine. I'm looking for advice, not a safety lecture. I have gotten three tickets before this one. All three of them were dismissed in court, so I have a clean record. I was driving with five friends in my car at 11:45pm. I was going EXACTLY the speed limit, not a mile an hour over it. One of my friends was reaching down to get something on the ground, so I thought it would be funny to jerk the car around, to make it difficult for him to pick up his phone. Before I performed this action, I made sure there were NO oncoming vehicles, and NO cars in front of me or behind me. I also checked the sidewalks to make sure there were no pedestrians around. After I safely checked my surroundings, I started swerving erratically in my own line. Not once did I cross the lines into another lane. I remained in my lane for the five-ten seconds I was swerving. A few seconds after I stopped swerving I saw police car lights flashing in my mirrors. I pulled over and the police officer came up to the car. Of course she asked me if I had been drinking. I had not had any alcohol to drink, and none of my friends in the car did either. We also did not have any alcohol with us in the vehicle. She asked for the usual information and went back to her car. Twenty minutes later she came back to my car and handed me a $550 ticket for negligent driving in the second degree (RCW 46.61.525). I was shocked. For one, I had a clean driving record, and I wasn't speeding or endangering the lives of others. She asked me if I understood why she gave me a ticket...and I told her no. I tried explaining to her that I was safe about it. I also brought up how 95% of drivers will drift over the yellow line on a road, or a white line that seperates the road and the bike/walking shoulder. I told her that I NEVER do this because I think it is reckless and downright dangerous. Mainly because they are not aware that they are drifting over the lines. Can you say an accident waiting to happen? Of course she wouldn't even aknowledge the arguement I was trying to bring to the issue. She stood firm and said it was unsafe. I've had my fair shair of communicating with cops while sitting in the drivers seat, (I've been pulled over 13 times, only 4 of them for speeding, and 5 of them I made the cop look like an idiot because their reasoning for pulling me over was completely flawed). I got a lawyer for the three tickets that were dismissed, so I know the routine. My question is, should I get a lawyer for this ticket? And do I have a fair shot at beating this ticket? Unfortunately the city I got the ticket in, (Redmond, Washington) trains their police officers to write flawless tickets without a single mistake. No other city in my area does that. In addition, Redmond is not doing to well with all the recent budget cuts that have taken place. So their police officers will write tickets for the smallest mistakes that drivers make. This is not just my dumb opinion, I have actually spoken to police officers from Redmond, and from other surrounding cities including, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Bellevue. I hope to hear some good advice on this issue. Thank you in advance for your replies! -Brandon


Answer:
I'm not sure if the charge you got is correct to call it negligent. What you were doing was more controlled swerving. I understand the cops point of view for issuing you a citation but I believe that the charge was a bit stiff. Vary course of travel, fail to maintain control of vehicle, fail to operate vehicle in a safe manner, negligent means you weren't in control, meaning other contributing factors, usually saved for alcohol related incidents. The other catch is you admitted to your actions, telling the officer what you were doing. Although that is usually the correct approach, it burned you this time. I recommend making a court date to see if you can get your charge reduced. Depending on your speed you were traveling when you decided that this maneuver was funny, you may get the judge to work with you. If you were going 25 mph, then you may get lucky, if you were traveling much faster, then I doubt it. One thing you may want to try, when you go to court and you see the officer there that wrote the ticket, ask her if she would agree to a lesser charge, let her bring it up to the judge. As long as you were polite and didn't piss her off, it should work. As far as the Lawyer, that's a personal thing, generally your paying a Lawyer to do exactly what your trying to do..lessen the fine or charge. If you think with your experience you can pull it off, go for it. If you have the money to afford an attorney, get one. Usually the attorney talks with the prosecutor before the exam and sets up the deal. You could save the money and do that as well.

I got a ticket for negligent driving in the second degree. Can someone answer a few questions for me?
Question:
Okay first off, I am not looking for a response telling me to "slow down" or "balls up" and pay the fine. I'm looking for advice, not a safety lecture. I have gotten three tickets before this one. All three of them were dismissed in court, so I have a clean record. I was driving with five friends in my car at 11:45pm. I was going EXACTLY the speed limit, not a mile an hour over it. One of my friends was reaching down to get something on the ground, so I thought it would be funny to jerk the car around, to make it difficult for him to pick up his phone. Before I performed this action, I made sure there were NO oncoming vehicles, and NO cars in front of me or behind me. I also checked the sidewalks to make sure there were no pedestrians around. After I safely checked my surroundings, I started swerving erratically in my own lane. Not once did I cross the lines into another lane. I remained in my lane for the five-ten seconds I was swerving. A few seconds after I stopped swerving I saw police car lights flashing in my mirrors. I pulled over and the police officer came up to the car. Of course she asked me if I had been drinking. I had not had any alcohol to drink, and none of my friends in the car did either. We also did not have any alcohol with us in the vehicle. She asked for the usual information and went back to her car. Twenty minutes later she came back to my car and handed me a $550 ticket for negligent driving in the second degree (RCW 46.61.525). I was shocked. For one, I had a clean driving record, and I wasn't speeding or endangering the lives of others. She asked me if I understood why she gave me a ticket...and I told her no. I tried explaining to her that I was safe about it. I also brought up how 95% of drivers will drift over the yellow line on a road, or a white line that seperates the road and the bike/walking shoulder. I told her that I NEVER do this because I think it is reckless and downright dangerous. Mainly because they are not aware that they are drifting over the lines. Can you say an accident waiting to happen? Of course she wouldn't even aknowledge the arguement I was trying to bring to the issue. She stood firm and said it was unsafe. I've had my fair shair of communicating with cops while sitting in the drivers seat, (I've been pulled over 13 times, only 4 of them for speeding, and 5 of them I made the cop look like an idiot because their reasoning for pulling me over was completely flawed). I got a lawyer for the three tickets that were dismissed, so I know the routine. My question is, should I get a lawyer for this ticket? And do I have a fair shot at beating this ticket? Unfortunately the city I got the ticket in, (Redmond, Washington) trains their police officers to write flawless tickets without a single mistake. No other city in my area does that. In addition, Redmond is not doing to well with all the recent budget cuts that have taken place. So their police officers will write tickets for the smallest mistakes that drivers make. This is not just my dumb opinion, I have actually spoken to police officers from Redmond, and from other surrounding cities including, Sammamish, Issaquah, and Bellevue. I hope to hear some good advice on this issue. Thank you in advance for your replies! -Brandon


Answer:
Hello , When you send in the ticket indicate you would like to challenge the charges/officer , you will later be assigned a court date . Somewher on the ticket will indicate your options . Any other questions you may call the County Courthouse and ask the clerk . When you get to the courtroom ... ask the person sitting there taking attendance that you would like a public defender . You will be givin a public defender . You will discuss in private your case . The defender will argue for you with the District Attorney or the Assistant District Attorney and come back with an answer . Or you may be offered a plea bargain to reduce the charge and lesser fine . You may get the charges dropped but unlikely .

Get out of a Carpool Lane violation ticket?
Question:
My question involves a traffic ticket from the state of: Washington So this is what happened to me: After suffering from the stomach flu for 3 days, I finally ventured forth from my house and was driving on I-405 North from Renton to Kirkland. I was driving 1 lane to the right of the carpool lane, when I suddenly felt violently ill (as in, I was about to throw up. There was a carpool lane exit for downtown Bellevue directly to my left, so I immediately pulled into it and exited, hoping to pull over before vomiting inside my car. There was a cop waiting at the turn right off the exit ramp, and he pulled me over for driving alone in a carpool lane. Is there ANY way I could fight this in court? I know I'm guilty, but is there any chance of my case being dismissed if I check "not guilty" on the ticket and explain the circumstances in court? Also, how do you qualify for a deferral? and if you receive one, does the ticket eventually go on your driving record, or is it put off indefinitely? One last thing: my driving record is clean, but I did receive a speeding ticket once before. When I went to court to contest that ticket, a man came around to everyone waiting in the courtroom and explained that if we paid the ticket up-front right then and there, it wouldn't go on our driving record (is this some loophole in the King County law that allows the city to make money?) I can't find any information about this online, but we jumped on the chance last time to keep our insurance from going up, and sure enough, the ticket was nullified and my driving record remained clear. Is there a chance this same opportunity will present itself if I contest this ticket? Thanks. One last thing, again: I'm 17, so is my parents' presence required in court if I contest the ticket? Also, if I go in person to the court to return my ticket, can I ask them to NOT mail a copy of my court date to my home? And instead, to either call me, or I could check back at the courthouse regulary until my court date was scheduled there? You see, I don't want my parents to find out about this ticket if at all possible! Thanks :)


Answer:
The law is the law and doesn't care if you were feeling sick. If it did, then anytime anyone got at ticket, they could say, "I was only speeding because I thought I was going to throw up". If you were too sick to follow the law, then you shouldn't have been driving. You violated the law and got a ticket. Accept the consequences.