Posted on 06/04/2012 1:32:17 PM PDT by Cowman
Authorities in Wisconsin are bound and determined to crack down on gray market vehicles. According to Stevens Point Journal, In 2010, the state government orchestrated a sting to catch Justin Beno selling two Nissan Skyline models, one of which played a role in the Fast and Furious franchise.
A Wisconsin Department of Transportation investigator spotted both a 1995 and a 1996 Skyline up for sale and pretended to be a buyer. The investigator asked if it were possible to get the cars titled, and Beno said he believed the vehicles could be titled in Florida, then retitled in Wisconsin.
This was not the correct answer. The government seized both cars and charged Beno with a spate of offenses, including two felony counts of conspiracy to commit fraud, one felony count of owning a vehicle without a vehicle identification number tag and two misdemeanors tied to those missing VIN tags. Beno said he had originally purchased the cars as bare shells without the tags and that the seller later mailed them along. He also says he didn't know it was a crime to simply own a car without its VIN tag attached.
Brown County Deputy District Attorney Dana Johnson offered Beno a plea deal wherein he would accept the misdemeanor charges and give up both fully restored Skylines. After offering to pay the fines and help the authorities find buyers for both machines overseas, the prosecutor declined. Instead, both cars will be crushed and sold for scrap. That's particularly heartbreaking after Beno spent years assembling both from parts bought from all over the world. It's made worse by the fact that in just a few short years, both cars will be exempt from federal safety and emissions standards for vehicles over 25 years old.
"Atlas Shrugged," by Ayn Rand
And that's what we live under.
/johnny
I see a prosecutor and a cop that either need to be fired or they need to start going after real crime, such as murder, arson, rape, theft, etc.
However, if these two cannot find enough to do so this is the kind of thing the cop and prosecutor go after, then obviously there are too many cops.
How much does this Wisconsin hero make with salary and benefits? Saving us common folk against a few unusual cars... I feel so much safer with people like this on guard... /S
I would more expect this from California than Wisconsin. But crushing the cars are a pure power trip and waste.
After offering to pay the fines and help the authorities find buyers for both machines overseas, the prosecutor declined.
Tar. Feathers. Repeat until they stop it...
A Democrat? Compost in the mentis? Supercilious martinet? Moron?
I unstand your response but why would the authorities need help finding overseas buyers?
Just as long as ya use a hot roofing tar kettle, and dunk ‘em.
Here is one that sold for $58,000. Note right hand drive?
http://www.classyauto.com/v/Nissan+Skyline/GTR/54476
Prosecutors are clearly an unregulated problem here in the US.
What I want to know is, Just what makes these things so unsafe?
If they drive around in Tokyo, London, Sydney, and Sao Paolo with these cars and they are safe there, Why are they unsafe in Green Bay or Madison?
something just ain't right.
If things go right tomorrow (crossing fingers and toes and praying) the high-water mark will be visible and we can take these thugs down at our leisure.
De-worm our Republic!
God bless America, God bless Wisconsin.
Go get ‘em!
PTL and pass the ammo, but overreaching prosecutors are not going away soon.
Fight, Wisconsin! Fight!
You are the future.
(Prayers, Lord that it goes as you will it so.)
My computer doesn't have a VIN. Wonder how long I'll get away with that. There's no such thing as private property anymore -- just stuff we pay for and use as long as the government permits.
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