Dodge Charger Police Package Hemi on 2040-cars
Muscatine, Iowa, United States
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This Police Package Charger is offered directly to you by the Muscatine County Iowa Sheriff's Office. This car was a take home unmarked car issued to an investigator. There are no exterior antenna holes and the car was never marked. The tires were recently replaced with high speed radials per factory specs. The car is in excellent condition. Factory black floor mats both front and rear are provided. All oil changes were done using full synthetic oil. This car is as nice as they get. Highway mileage is running 28-29 mile per gallon. The car may be inspected at the Patrol Headquarters at 3600 Park Ave. W. Muscatine, Iowa. Email or questions or call 563-262-4190 ext. 106. Leave a message if I am not in and I will return your call. There are 4 remote entry fobs with this car. We sell all our Patrol and Investigator vehicles on EBAY and have many satisfied customers. Check our feedback. Sheriff Dave White |
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Auto blog
Auto Mergers and Acquisitions: Suicide or salvation?
Tue, Sep 8 2015We love the Moses figure. A savior riding in from stage right with the ideas, the smarts, and the scrappiness to put things right. Alan Mullaly. Carroll Shelby. Lee Iacocca. Andrew Carnegie. Steve Jobs. Elon Musk. Bart Simpson. Sergio Marchionne does not likely view himself with Moses-like optics, but the CEO of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles recently gave a remarkable, perhaps prophetic interview with Automotive News about his interest and the inevitability of merging with a potential automotive partner like General Motors. Marchionne has been overtly public about his notion that GM must merge with FCA. For a bit of context, GM sold 9.9 million vehicles in 2014, posting $2.8 billion in net income, while FCA sold 4.75 million units and earned $2.4 billion in net income, painting a very rosy FCA earnings-to-sales picture. But that's not the entire picture. Most people in the auto industry still remember the trainwreck that was the DaimlerChrysler "merger" written in what turned out to be sand in 1998. It proved to be a master class in how not to fuse two companies, two cultures, two continents, and two management teams. Oh, it worked for the two individuals at both helms pre-merger. They got silly rich. And the industry itself was in a misty romance at the time with mergers and acquisitions. BMW bought Rolls-Royce. Volkswagen Group bought Bentley, Bugatti, and Lamborghini, putting all three brands into their rightful place in both products and positioning. No marriages there, so no false pretense. Finally, Nissan and Renault got married in 1999. A successful marriage requires several rare elements in this atmosphere of gas fumes and power lust. But a successful marriage requires several rare elements in this atmosphere of gas fumes and power lust, the principle part being honesty. Daimler and Chrysler lied to each other. The heads of each unit, the product planners, and finance all presented their then-current and long-range forecasts to each other with less-than-forthright accuracy. Daimler was the far greater equal and no one from the Chrysler side enjoyed that. The cultures were entirely different, too, and little was done to bridge that gap. Which brings me back to the present overtures by Marchionne to GM. "There are varying degrees of hugs," Marchionne stated in the Automotive News piece. "I can hug you nicely, I can hug you tightly, I can hug you like a bear, I can really hug you." Seriously?
2018 Dodge Challenger SRT Demon | First Run at Lucas Oil Raceway
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2016 Dodge Viper ACR First Drive [w/video]
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