Buy Cars and Trucks in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Chevrolet Kodiak 1993 Chevy Kodiak w  10' plow & V Box Salter
Chevrolet Kodiak 1993 Chevy Kodiak w 10' plow & V Box Salter
$6,500.00
$7,500.00
Time Left: 18h 13m
Buick : Riviera Buick Riviera Convertible
Buick : Riviera Buick Riviera Convertible
$750.00 (7 Bids)
Time Left: 23h 24m
Chrysler : Town & Country Red, 1 owner, automatic
Chrysler : Town & Country Red, 1 owner, automatic
$2,050.00 (16 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 13h 3m
Ford : Fairlane 1966 Ford Fairlane 500
Ford : Fairlane 1966 Ford Fairlane 500
$1,131.09 (10 Bids)
Time Left: 1d 19h 35m
Dodge : Ram 1500 SLT 2004 Dodge Quad Cab 4x4 Black
Dodge : Ram 1500 SLT 2004 Dodge Quad Cab 4x4 Black
$645.00
$5,900.00
Time Left: 2d 3h
Ford : Mustang GT 1995 Mustang GT 5 speed
Ford : Mustang GT 1995 Mustang GT 5 speed
$2,800.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 3h 7m
Ford : F-150 XLT 2000 F150 4x4 ext cab 4-door
Ford : F-150 XLT 2000 F150 4x4 ext cab 4-door
$2,850.00 (19 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 3h 59m
Lexus : LS Lexus LS 400
Lexus : LS Lexus LS 400
$955.00 (9 Bids)
Time Left: 2d 23h 50m
Ford Business 1946 Ford 2-Door Business Coupe
Ford Business 1946 Ford 2-Door Business Coupe
$11,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 3d 1h 14m
Ford : Fairlane FAIRLANE 1957: Ford fairlane 2 Door ranch Wangon
Ford : Fairlane FAIRLANE 1957: Ford fairlane 2 Door ranch Wangon
$11,500.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 3d 21h 58m
Mercedes-Benz : SL-Class 500 1996 Mercedes Benz SL500 convertible
Mercedes-Benz : SL-Class 500 1996 Mercedes Benz SL500 convertible
$10,000.00
$14,990.00
Time Left: 3d 22h 49m
Audi : Q7 Premium 2007 Silver Q7! 3 roofs Nav 19'' wheel
Audi : Q7 Premium 2007 Silver Q7! 3 roofs Nav 19'' wheel
$20,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 22h 24m
Jaguar : XJR XJ R DVDs 2005 Black XJR NAV Turbocharged
Jaguar : XJR XJ R DVDs 2005 Black XJR NAV Turbocharged
$12,000.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 22h 25m
GMC : Yukon Nav 2008 Gray Yukon Denali
GMC : Yukon Nav 2008 Gray Yukon Denali
$21,888.00 (1 Bids)
Time Left: 4d 22h 27m
Chevrolet : Tahoe LT 3 Sunroof 2007 Leather 4X4 Tahoe!
Chevrolet : Tahoe LT 3 Sunroof 2007 Leather 4X4 Tahoe!
$18,000.00 (0 Bids)
Time Left: 5d 57m

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Questions Related to south, milwaukee cars

Provided By Y! Answers

Can I be a Police Officer In Milwaukee?
Question:
I am a 20 year old student getting a bachelors degree at UW Madison. UW Madison doesn't have a criminal justice major so I am taking a relatively related major (probably sociology, political science etc). I have been uncertain as to what I exactly want to do. However I am seriously considering becoming a police detective. In the state of Wisconsin, you have to become a police officer for a few years, take the police detective exam, and then eventually get promoted to detective. I have a few questions in regards to this. First, I was wondering who typically gets hired as police officers in Milwaukee? I know its an extensive process and very competitive. I was just wondering on average, where did these people go to school? What were their GPA's typically? etc. I know these are specific questions so I'm basically asking if anyone knows of people who have police officer jobs in Milwaukee, and if they know these answers. Also, the second part of my question is if anyone knows how (for a lack of a better word) easy is it to become a police detective in Milwaukee, or more generally, south east Wisconsin. Are police officers on a long list waiting to get promoted after taking the exam? Or are they generally able to find a job quickly? Finally, I was wondering about the background test Milwaukee, or Wisconsin in general conducts for police officer candidates. I've never gotten any serious violations. Basically a few speeding tickets, mainly parking tickets, etc. However, I have gotten in a few car accidents. I was wondering if that would basically disqualify me on getting a police officer job? Or serve as a huge disadvantage, and should seriously consider another route in my career. They were all probably 3 years ago or so, and I'm not sure how far back the background checks go in Wisconsin. Thanks for answering as many questions as you can. I know I have a lot. Many of the questions have a range of answers and it varies on departments, considering this, please answer them as best as possible without saying "it varies" Thanks!


Answer:
Study hard, get good grades, stay off of State St. on the weekends, stay away from Langdon St. girls, drive slower and watch where you park, and your driving record will have little effect on your application process. The background check is pretty thorough; did you have any bad habits in the womb?

How come an illegal with 2 dui arrests is never deported now has 3rd dui that takes life is PC why he was not?
Question:
RACINE - A man charged with killing another in a drunken driving crash last summer will serve 10 years in prison. Martimiano Montano, 40, pleaded guilty in Racine County Circuit Court to second-degree reckless homicide, reduced from homicide by intoxicated use of a vehicle, and to his third drunken driving offense. Montano was driving on Douglas Avenue on June 3, 2008 when his car crashed into a car driven by David Penkalski, 54, of South Milwaukee. Penkalski was killed; Montano was injured. On Monday, a judge sentenced Montano to 10 years in prison and five years extended supervision. It is unlikely that Montano will serve the supervision, prosecutors said, because he is an illegal immigrant and faces deportation. Both men had been drinking, records show, and their blood alcohol levels were above the legal limit. Montano's blood alcohol level was .178 percent, more than twice the legal limit of .08; Penkalski's blood alcohol level was .095. Montano has prior drunken driving convictions from 2003 and 2005. How come an illegal with 2 dui arrests is never deported and now has 3rd dui that takes a life is PC why he was not deported ?http://www.journaltimes.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/article_ 447f2466-ce53-11de-8f15-001cc4c03286.html..............


Answer:
To answer your question, the reason he was not deported is because the local jail did not have a 287g program. He'd have been sent home after the first arrest if they were running 287g. Now, he gets 10 years for a cold blooded murder. There's no justice.

Programing a Unider Bearcat BCT15 Police Scanner?
Question:
tell me how to program this police scanner to sacan local police. here is the info, but i dont know how to program it. The City of South Milwaukee Police Department uses the Milwaukee County 800Mhz Motorola type II smart net Callsign - WNWI 428 _Site 001 Primary: 866.08750 866.15000 866.17500 866.53750c 866.58750c 866.65000 867.03750c 867.06250c 867.85000 868.16250 868.23 750 868.61250 868.63750 _Site 002 P25 System: 866.23750 866.56250 868.21250c 868.32500 868.52500 Conection tone…..116.13 Talk Groop ID: 1)…..18064..Dispatch …..A01…. hex=469 2) ….18096…Car 2 Car….A02…. hex=46b 3)…..18028.Tactical....A03…..hex=4... 4)…..18160â €¦________…...A04.…hex=46f 5)…..18192…Supervisor….A05â €¦.hex=47... Additional info: SOUTH MILWAUKEE POLICE (on the MCTRS) 18064 = A1 (Dispatch) 18096 = A2 - Squad to Squad 18128 = A3 - 18160 = A4 - Varda Alarms 18192 = Police - A5 - Supervisors 18960 = Zone E 18480 = Cudahy PD F4 18768 = St Francis PD F4 Any one can help? i just want to set this up to sacan South Milwaukee PD and Fire.


Answer:
Hey I am the one from Waukesha that has the same scanner as you and I found out how to program it. 1.Turn on and press Menu 2.Click program System 3.Click new system 4.Press Mot TYPE2 5.Press edit name and change to something like Milwaukee Police 6.Scroll down Click edit site. new site 7.Click 800 MHz standard 8.set a quick key any number 9.Click Set frequencies , New frequency and then enter them all .which i believe for Milwaukee are the 868.612 and the 866.??? so on and so forth. 10.Csroll down and press set state set to Milwaukee 11.pres menu to go back to where you clicke don set site and then click on set group 12.New Group 13.Go to edit channel and put in the TGID Like 18064 for a1 Dispatch. Then edit name and put in the name " Area 1 Dispatch" 14. Then keep adding TGIDs for differant things like 18768 for St francis pd then when your all all done press menu until u are back to the scanning part and then i believe just click the number one that you set as the quick key for the system. It is much easier if you buy the ARC15 Lite from Scanner Master for 29 dollars as a download but if it does not work dont yell at me for telling you to buy it but mine works and thats what I did so GOOD LUCK . Oh and I might make a video on the ARC15 Lite Software for other people so if you want to see me do it before you buy it ill probobly post one on youtube tomorrow ill give you the link later. Give me your E-Mail adress so i can send you the video of using the ARC 15 Lite software I can not put it on youtube becuase it would be to small. Send your e-mail adress to mine at nxi_defensesystems@yahoo.com. And ill send you the video.

what do you think of this zombie book intro?
Question:
As Clint pushed the last of the 30 cals into his old black revolver and dropped the spent cartrages onto the concrete, jack carefully wiped the dark oil-like blood off of his three-and-a-half-foot long broad sword with the thickly stained tatters of a shammy. Although he had bought the sword as decoration for his bed-room wall, as soon as the news of the infection had spread to south Milwaukee Jack had given it a razor sharp edge and practiced with it for hours a day. Jack had doubted he would use it since his family had guns and even if the infection got to his residency, they would be using guns not swords. But the last few weeks had proven that guns weren't enough to stop the nation wide spread of the sanguine virus. Now he and his brother were all that remained of his family; alone in the dark with rain heavily poring onto his head. He glanced at Clint who's nod told him they should get moving. Jack sheathed his weapon and followed closely behind his older brother hoping they wouldn't run into another pack since the last one had nearly taken all the strength out of him. As they quietly crept down a dark alley Jack thought back on his first encounter with the sanguine. It was around seven in the evening, only one week ago, when he was just sitting down to a cold dinner after his shift at McDonald's. He had heard a couple of the living room windows smash and his heart skipped a beat as he dropped his hamburger and wheeled around. As he quickly approached the living room he heard movement within and prayed it was just a stray dog or a car accident. Deep inside, some how, he knew it wasn't. As his eyes came across the sanguine he felt his hands grow cold and beads of sweat roll down his back. It was their neighbor Mr. Clark, who's porky body had smashed through the front window and rolled to the back of the room. Aside from his slightly pale skin, staring eyes, and the bits of glass sticking out of arbitrary parts of his body, he looked alarmingly normal. Jack's little sister was sleeping on a couch in the middle of the room against the wall and as the sanguine's gaze went from him to his sister a new emotion flooded through his body. His fists clenched so tightly that his finger nails pierced the skin of his palms and his vision became slightly blurred. He felt an uncontrollable anger consume his rationality and he ran at the sanguine as at turned toward Clare. Although Mr. Clark had at least eighty pounds on him when Jack slammed into the sanguine both of them flew back in opposite directions. As Jack got back to his feet Clint ran by him tightly holding a fire prong in his right hand. A flurry of blows sent dark viscus blood all over the back part of the room and left the sanguine silently twitching on the floor. Once Jack had seen that the threat had been neutralized his eyes left the sanguine and went to Clint who was looking with tears in his eyes at Clare. Jack looked at her and she was scrunched in a ball in a corner of the couch shaking violently and crying silently. As Clint approached her she wet herself and let out a sob that in turn made Jack start to silently cry. Clint picked her up and she hugged tightly to his shoulder as he carried her out of the room. Jack followed closely behind. Jack knew he had said some things to try to comfort her but as he thought back to that day he couldn't remember exactly what he had said to her nor what he and his brother said immediately afterwards.


Answer:
It starts with rough times your characters have , and I feel for them ( not that I recently had a zombie problem myself ) . The characters seem worth knowing , and the story flows well . I would work on a sentence structure a little more , but all in all , great job !

A scene out of the zombie book i'm writing.?
Question:
I'm thinking of writing a zombie book and this is small scene. What do you think. As Clint pushed the last of the 30 cals into his old black revolver and dropped the spent cartrages onto the concrete, jack carefully wiped the dark oil-like blood off of his three-and-a-half-foot long broad sword with the thickly stained taters of a shammy. Although he had bought the sword as decoration for his bed-room wall, as soon as the news of the infection had spread to south Milwaukee Jack had given it a razor sharp edge and practiced with it for hours a day. Jack had doubted he would use it since his family had guns and even if the infection got to his residency, they would be using guns not swords. But the last few weeks had proven that guns weren't enough to stop the nation wide spread of the sanguine virus. Now he and his brother were all that remained of his family; alone in the dark with rain heavily poring onto his head. He glanced at Clint who's nod told him they should get moving. Jack sheathed his weapon and followed closely behind his older brother hoping they wouldn't run into another pack since the last one had nearly taken all the strength out of him. As they quietly crept down a dark alley Jack thought back on his first encounter with the sanguine. It was around seven in the evening, only one week ago, when he was just sitting down to a cold dinner after his shift at McDonald's. He had heard a couple of the living room windows smash and his heart skipped a beat as he dropped his hamburger and wheeled around. As he quickly approached the living room he heard movement within and prayed it was just a stray dog or a car accident. Deep inside, some how, he knew it wasn't. As his eyes came across the sanguine he felt his hands grow cold and beads of sweat roll down his back. It was their neighbor Mr. Clark, who's porky body had smashed through the front window and rolled to the back of the room. Aside from his slightly pale skin, staring eyes, and the bits of glass sticking out of arbitrary parts of his body, he looked alarmingly normal. Jack's little sister was sleeping on a couch in the middle of the room against the wall and as the sanguine's gaze went from him to his sister a new emotion flooded through his body. His fists clenched so tightly that his finger nails pierced the skin of his palms and his vision became slightly blurred. He felt an uncontrollable anger consume his rationality and he ran at the sanguine as at turned toward Clare. Although Mr. Clark had at least eighty pounds on him when Jack slammed into the sanguine both of them flew back in opposite directions. As Jack got back to his feet Clint ran by him tightly holding a fire prong in his right hand. A flurry of blows sent dark viscus blood all over the back part of the room and left the sanguine silently twitching on the floor. Once Jack had seen that the threat had been neutralized his eyes left the sanguine and went to Clint who was looking with tears in his eyes at Clare. Jack looked at her and she was scrunched in a ball in a corner of the couch shaking violently and crying silently. As Clint approached her she wet herself and let out a sob that in turn made Jack start to silently cry. Clint picked her up and she hugged tightly to his shoulder as he carried her out of the room. Jack followed closely behind. Jack knew he had said some things to try to comfort her but as he thought back to that day he couldn't remember exactly what he had said to her nor what he and his brother said immediately afterwards.


Answer:
It's a fine story, go ahead and write it. You can correct the grammar and punctuation on the first rewrite. However you do need to break this down into paragraphs very badly. Most people will not read it if it looks like it does above. You need to distinguish what scenes are action and which ones are background. You are in the middle of an action scene and pause to tell us about where a sword came from and the death of the boy's parents/family. These do not belong together. If this is the opening scene of the book, then just give us some action. You can reveal the background information better with a flashback or conversations between the boys when they aren't fighting for their lives. Take the opportunity to grab your readers right here and don't bog them down with a lot of unnecessary details. You just can't try to cram so much story into such as short piece, particularly when you are telling the reader everything and not allowing them to experience it along with the characters. Oh, and one point of realism I'd like to mention. The majority of swords you buy as decorations are stamped, not forged, and are unlikely to accept any kind of an edge. Either way that doesn't really matter as most swords wer

what do you think of this zombie book im writing?
Question:
I'm thinking of writing a zombie book and this is small scene. What do you think. As Clint pushed the last of the 30 cals into his old black revolver and dropped the spent cartrages onto the concrete, jack carefully wiped the dark oil-like blood off of his three-and-a-half-foot long broad sword with the thickly stained tatters of a shammy. Although he had bought the sword as decoration for his bed-room wall, as soon as the news of the infection had spread to south Milwaukee Jack had given it a razor sharp edge and practiced with it for hours a day. Jack had doubted he would use it since his family had guns and even if the infection got to his residency, they would be using guns not swords. But the last few weeks had proven that guns weren't enough to stop the nation wide spread of the sanguine virus. Now he and his brother were all that remained of his family; alone in the dark with rain heavily poring onto his head. He glanced at Clint who's nod told him they should get moving. Jack sheathed his weapon and followed closely behind his older brother hoping they wouldn't run into another pack since the last one had nearly taken all the strength out of him. As they quietly crept down a dark alley Jack thought back on his first encounter with the sanguine. It was around seven in the evening, only one week ago, when he was just sitting down to a cold dinner after his shift at McDonald's. He had heard a couple of the living room windows smash and his heart skipped a beat as he dropped his hamburger and wheeled around. As he quickly approached the living room he heard movement within and prayed it was just a stray dog or a car accident. Deep inside, some how, he knew it wasn't. As his eyes came across the sanguine he felt his hands grow cold and beads of sweat roll down his back. It was their neighbor Mr. Clark, who's porky body had smashed through the front window and rolled to the back of the room. Aside from his slightly pale skin, staring eyes, and the bits of glass sticking out of arbitrary parts of his body, he looked alarmingly normal. Jack's little sister was sleeping on a couch in the middle of the room against the wall and as the sanguine's gaze went from him to his sister a new emotion flooded through his body. His fists clenched so tightly that his finger nails pierced the skin of his palms and his vision became slightly blurred. He felt an uncontrollable anger consume his rationality and he ran at the sanguine as at turned toward Clare. Although Mr. Clark had at least eighty pounds on him when Jack slammed into the sanguine both of them flew back in opposite directions. As Jack got back to his feet Clint ran by him tightly holding a fire prong in his right hand. A flurry of blows sent dark viscus blood all over the back part of the room and left the sanguine silently twitching on the floor. Once Jack had seen that the threat had been neutralized his eyes left the sanguine and went to Clint who was looking with tears in his eyes at Clare. Jack looked at her and she was scrunched in a ball in a corner of the couch shaking violently and crying silently. As Clint approached her she wet herself and let out a sob that in turn made Jack start to silently cry. Clint picked her up and she hugged tightly to his shoulder as he carried her out of the room. Jack followed closely behind. Jack knew he had said some things to try to comfort her but as he thought back to that day he couldn't remember exactly what he had said to her nor what he and his brother said immediately afterwards.


Answer:
I liked the emotional flashback. It gives a glimpse into more than just their need for survival. It gives them depth, makes Jack and Clint more realistic. "Jack had doubted he would use it since his family had guns and even if the infection got to his residency, they would be using guns not swords." (This sentence is repetitive. You have others like this too.) Jacks family kept a stockpile of guns that they would use to fight. (That is more succinct.) To me I pictured this guy laying down on the living room floor. For a minute I thought maybe the sanguines tossed him through the window. So I was confused when Jack started fighting this guy. "It was their neighbor Mr. Clark, who's porky body had smashed through the front window and rolled to the back of the room." Other than that I thought it was good. Clean description that painted a vivid and sensitive picture.

What happened to those southern manners?
Question:
I remember when I was a teenager I went down to Charlotte, NC and what I found really weird was that people would actually walk up to you and ask you how your day has been but they actually wanted an answer, also walking around cars would honk at you I thought they were angry at first but it turned out they were just saying hello, there was other things too like men would hold doors open for women and stuff (I remember I didn't do this and a random guy gave me into trouble for it) but that was in 1988, now it seems Charlotte has caught up with Milwaukee manner wise (ie there is none) the South is very different now, even the accents are different.


Answer:
It's because of all the in-migration of Cranky-Yankees over the years. How else would you explain NC going for O'Bummer in the last election? Manners AND intelligence are on the decline in NC.

What will happen to this illegal who was drinking & driving Victims Identified in Easter Hit-and-Run Crash?
Question:
MILWAUKEE - The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner has released the identity of two people who were killed in a car crash that startled neighbors from their sleep early Easter morning. According to the Medical Examiner's office, Ernesto Montejo-Cortes, 26, and Raynel Villareal-Lucas, 35, died in the crash. Police arrested a 35-year-old suspect, who they say is in the country illegally. At 2:30 am Sunday, a truck could be seen with its front end smashed near 12th & Rogers on the south side. It appears that the truck slammed into a Toyota, killing the two men inside. Montejo-Cortes was driving the truck, while Villareal-Lucas was his passenger. Firefighters had to remove the roof to free the deceased victims. 7th grader Andres Oros spoke to TODAY'S TMJ4 with his mother's permission about the crash that woke him up. "The big smash. It scared me out of nowhere," he explained. "It was really bad because these two cars were smashed up. I was wondering if it was drunk drivers or speeders." Police say this is literally a hit and run. The driver of the truck ran from scene. "He had two people with him," said Darius Harris, who lives nearby. "They helped him get out of the vehicle and then took off running." Michael Pagelsdorf claims he saw and heard those three people leaving the intersection. "I didn't really get a good look at them," Pagelsdorf explained. "But, one of the persons was like 'we got to get out of here.'" http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/120702684.html Wil l he be deported with no jail time or will he get few weeks and 10 years of probation ? Will he be ordered to pay restitution to the families ? What if he was still in Mexico would of never happened ? What if he has kids will separation of families help him avoid any time in jail allowing him to go free with a stern warning not to do this again ? Relatives told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel that Villareal-Lucas had worked as a police officer in Mexico. http://www.piercecountyherald.com/event/article/id/352 96/group/News/


Answer:
Why do you assume that the person who committed the crime is Mexican; only because they say that he's in the country illegally? No where in the article do they release the person's name to assume that he is even Hispanic, only those of the victims. However, to answer your question; this person will more than likely NOT be deported until he serves his prison sentence. He will face criminal charges and be sentenced and serve out his sentence in a state prison. Upon his release from his prison term, they will hold him until he has deportation hearings and then be deported to his country of origin.

find it funny?
Question:
You might be from Wisconsin if... - You define summer as three months of bad sledding. - Your definition of a small town is one that only has one bar. - Snow tires come standard on all your cars. - You refer to the Packers as "we". - At least 50% of your relatives work on a dairy farm. - You can make sense out of the words "UPNORT" and "BATREE". - Your have ever gotten frostbitten and sunburned in the same week. - You can identify a Michigan accent. - You know what "cow-tipping" is. - You learned to drive a tractor before the training wheels were off your bike. - "Down south" to you means Chicago. - Traveling coast to coast means going from Superior to Milwaukee. - The "big three" means Miller, Old Milwaukee and PBR. - A brat is something that you eat. - You have no problems spelling "Milwaukee". - You consider Madison "exotic". - You got a passport to go to Minnesota. - Your idea of foreign culture is listening to Da Yoopers. - You don't have a coughing fit from one sip of PBR. - You've seen a hodag. - You used to think Deer Season was included as an official school holiday. - You know that Gotham is a real city. - You can actually pronounce and spell Oconomowoc and Menomonie. - You know what a bubbler is. - The snow on your roof in August weighs more than you do. - Your idea of creative landscaping is a statue of a cow next to your blue spruce. - Your neighbor throws a party to celebrate his new machine shed. - Your Friday night out is taking your girlfriend shining for deer. - You go out for fish fry every Friday. - You go to work in a snowsuit every morning and return home wearing shorts. - When you tell someone where you are from they say: "I thought that was part of Canada". - Bernie Brewer is your idol because he gets to dive into a giant beer mug. - Your idea of the seasons is Winter, Spring, the 4th of July and Fall. - You know how to polka. Your idea of diversity is having black, brown and white cows. - You drink "soda" and refer to your father as "pop". - Formal wear is a flannel shirt, blue jeans and a BLACK baseball cap. - You tried to tap the "Worlds Largest Six Pack". - Your children describe their summer vacation our of state as a "trip to Door County". - You are unaware that there is a legal drinking age. - You go to Florida to get a tan in August. - You caught a fish in Lake Michigan that glowed in the dark. - You define the swimming season as "Labor Day Weekend". - Your 4th of July picnic was moved indoors due to frost. - You know where the city of Waunaukee is AND can pronounce it. - You can visit Luxemborg, Holland, Balgium, Denmark and Poland all in the same afternoon. - You decided to have a picnic this summer because it fell on a weekend. - You actually know what Schaeffer's Beer is and you like it. - You know what Euchre and Sheepshead are. - You have been involved in a "drive-by hay bailing". - Two words: "Leinenkugels Beer". - Your refer to stop lights as "stop & go lights".


Answer:
Sure do ten out of ten!!!

Americans- Feel this is another reason to deport illegals?
Question:
Illegal immigrant sentenced following fatal crash January 21, 2010 | 04:38 PM Elkhorn — A 18-year-old illegal immigrant who while driving stoned blew a stop sign and killed a man will spend the next 10 years in prison. When Judge Michael Gibbs announced Donovan N. Espinosa's sentence of 20 years — 10 years of initial confinement and 10 years of extended supervision — the family of his victim, Dean A. Schumacher, applauded and shouted "thank you." While on the other side of the packed courtroom members of Espinosa's family cried. "The public has the right to be safe from stoned punks driving around in the early hours," Gibbs said. "The public is sick of these kind of things." On March 10, police responded to an accident at 3:52 a.m. on Highway 11 and Bowers Road. Espinosa blew a stop sign while driving south on Bowers Road and hit Schumacher's vehicle. When police arrived to the scene, Schumacher was pronounced dead. Espinosa has no driver's license and has never been trained to drive a vehicle. That night he had stolen his mother's car and planned on driving from Milwaukee to California to live with his father. He said he took the Bowers Road exit looking for a place to get food or to sleep. District Attorney Phillip Koss said during the sentencing hearing that Schumacher was a hard-working man who supported his family and that his life was ended because of Espinosa's irresponsible actions. "This could have been anybody. This is playing Russian Roulette out on the roadway," Koss said. Koss said the family has further suffered because Espinosa has shown no signs of remorse. Espinosa's attorney, Christopher L. Kuehn, argued for a shorter sentence Kuehn said that Espinosa has very minimal intelligence. "His complete lack of remorse goes to the concept of his lack of mental faculty," he said. "He clearly doesn't understand his actions." Kuehn said Espinosa lives in a "fantasy world" and that he "wants to be considered more serious than he is." "I'm scared for Donovan, I'm scared for what will happen to him," he said. He also said the amount of marijuana that was found in Espinosa's system was minimal. The state crime lab performed a test that showed the amount of marijuana that was in Espinosa's system at the time of the accident. Kuehn cited a study that stated that amount of marijuana would be similar to a blood alcohol level of 0.03. After the accident, Walworth County Sheriff's Department Deputies didn't perform field sobriety tests, which Kuehn argued further demonstrated that Espinosa had a minimal amount of drugs in his system. After his arrest, Espinosa's behavior didn't help his case. While in the Walworth County Jail, he has been written up 19 times, according to Koss. When he was interviewed by pre-sentence investigators he didn't answer questions appropriately and laughed when asked if he had a problem with drugs or alcohol. "He apparently believes he is above the law and doesn't believe he has to obey the laws of our society," according to the PSI report. "He is faking bad." He also is a self-proclaimed member of the Spanish Cobras. The PSI writer wrote that Espinosa said this with "a great deal of pride." However, Kuehn said the Milwaukee Police Gang Unit had never heard of the sect or division of the gang Espinosa claimed to be from. They also had never heard of Espinosa. Gibbs didn't buy Kuehn's arguments. "Dean Schumacher's family doesn't get to look at him and visit him in prison," Gibbs said. "It wasn't an accident — it was a homicide." Gibbs said although Espinosa may have minimal intelligence he believes he knows right from wrong. "You know causing someone's death is wrong," Gibbs said. "You are a dope-smoking gang-banger that decided one day you were going to steal your mom's car and go to California." Gibbs said Espinosa's demeanor in the court has been strange and that during court proceedings Espinosa would give Gibbs a "hard-eye" "There is no question he is an odd man," Gibbs said. When Espinosa was given a chance to speak he said he was sorry for the accident. He also told the PSI writer that he felt bad for his crime. "I'm kind of sad about the accident," Espinosa said. "I want the family to know that I'm sorry and that is it."


Answer:
I agree with Will....illegal crossing is a Federal crime so any crime they commit should be considered a felony. The criminals country should have the option of taking them back and completing the punishment. If they decide not to then the criminal alien should be executed. Taxpayers should never be responsible for the legal fees or incarceration costs of criminal aliens.