Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Laferrari 488 Gtb Christmas White Winter Raffle Event Exclusive Entry On Ebay on 2040-parts.com

US $100.00
Location:

Mill Valley, California, United States

Mill Valley, California, United States
Condition:Used

Christmas White Winter Raffle Event Exclusive Entry on eBay Only



Grand Prize 1st Place  LaFerrari 

  Prize # 2  Ferrari 488 GTB


 Entry must be made by 12/24/1611:59 PM Pacific Standard Time date. 

Date of drawing 12/25/16. Delivery Date 01/01/17.

Winner must have a valid US issued driver license - up to date 

insurance coverage upon claiming prize. 





RULES FOR OPERATION OF CONTESTS AND SWEEPSTAKES


RULES FOR OPERATION OF CONTESTS


  • All the rules, regulations, terms and conditions of the contest. Winner must have valid US driver license & insurance. Raffle sales must exceed one of the prizes total cost for drawing to be drawn. Each $100 entry is equivalent to 1 raffle ticket. Participants can purchase unlimited entries with no restrictions. Estimated probability of winning is 1st place prize is 1 in 47,000 - 2nd Place Prize 1 in 3500.

Refund Policy: Refund within one year of payment anything of value received from a participant making written request if the participant was unable to participate through no fault of his or her own. Upon request by any participant, a list of names of all winners, prizes, and correct (and winning) solutions must be provided.11 Upon request by any member of the public, the actual number and percentage of contestants correctly solving each raffle or game in the most recently completed contest must be provided.12 Our party must keep detailed records of a contest for at least two years after all the prizes are awarded.13

These provisions do not apply to advertising programs that are regulated by, and comply with, the provisions of California law which govern the use of gifts or prizes to induce attendance at sales presentations (a type of promotional giveaway).14 Also, charitable trusts and corporations, or organizations which are exempt from taxation under state or federal law, are not bound by the provisions on the operation of contests.15

Finally, a contest in which participation is conditioned on payment of value and in which prizes are awarded primarily by chance is a lottery rather than a contest. Under California law, only the California State Lottery may operate a lottery. All other lotteries, except bingo games operated by charitable organizations, are prohibited by California's Penal Code.16

Legal Guides on the rules prohibiting lotteries and the rules for promotional giveaways are available from the California Department of Consumer Affairs, through the department's homepage at www.dca.ca.gov.

RULES FOR OPERATION OF SWEEPSTAKES

(Business and Professions Code Sections
17539.5, 17539.15, 17539.55)

A "sweepstakes" is any procedure for distributing anything of value by lot or chance. A sweepstakes must not violate any provision of law, including the law that prohibits lotteries.17

Consumers often confuse sweepstakes, lotteries and contests. The main difference between a sweepstakes and a lottery is that the lottery participants have paid or promised to pay value for the chance to win the prize.18 The main differences between a sweepstakes and a contest are that the contest participants must use at least some skill to win the prize and must pay some value to participate in the contest.19

In regards to sweepstakes, however, solicitation materials containing sweepstakes entry material or selling information regarding sweepstakes (hereafter "solicitation materials") must include a clear and conspicuous statement that no purchase or payment is necessary in order to enter the sweepstakes. This statement must be included in the solicitation materials in either the official rules or the entry form and must be in readily understandable terms. If the statement is included in the official rules, it must be set out in a separate paragraph and be printed in capital letters in contrasting type. The statement cannot be smaller than the largest type used in the official rules.20

A sweepstakes sponsor may not charge a fee as a condition of receiving a monetary distribution or obtaining information about a prize or sweepstakes.21 The official rules must disclose information about the date(s) the final winner(s) will be determined.22

The operator of the sweepstakes must treat entries that are not accompanied by orders the same as entries that are accompanied by orders. That is, the operator cannot subject an entry that is not accompanied by an order to any disadvantage in the winner selection process that an entry accompanied by an order would not be subjected to.23 In addition, the solicitation materials cannot represent that an entry accompanied by an order may win or may win more prizes than an entry not accompanied by an order, and cannot represent that an entry not accompanied by an order will have a reduced chance of winning.24

Solicitation materials, or solicitation materials selling sweepstakes information, cannot represent that the recipient is a winner or has already won a prize or any particular prize unless the recipient has in fact won a prize or any particular prize. Any such representation is evaluated taking into account the context in which the representation is made (for example, the emphasis, print, size, color, and presentation of the representation and any qualifying language).25

ENFORCEMENT

(Business and Professions Code sections 17200, 17534-17536)

Any person who violates the provisions concerning the operation of contests or sweepstakes is guilty of a misdemeanor,38 and may be prosecuted by the Attorney General or by a district attorney. These provisions also are enforceable by civil court actions which can be filed by private parties, district attorneys, city attorneys, county counsel, the Attorney General and other agencies of the State. Depending on the nature of the action, remedies may include civil penalties of up to $2,500 for each violation, injunction, and restitution.39 A contest or sweepstakes which violates these provisions also may be subject to an additional civil penalty of up to $2,500 for each violation as an unlawful business practice.40

Stig outed as Ben Collins – again

Mon, 23 Aug 2010

The Stig is Ben Collins It’s a game Top Gear has played since the days of ‘Black Stig’ (Perry McCarthy – F1 almost was) – Who is the Stig? Not only has it provided the Beeb with an endless run of free publicity as everyone and his dog speculates on the Stig’s identity, they’ve even made money on the back of the Stig’s identity with Stig-focused games and goodies from the gloriously tacky range of Top Gear ephemera. And this last week Stiggy has been in the news as he tries to get his memoirs published – Stig: The Autobiography – much to the consternation of the Beeb, who believe his contract gives him no chance of revealing his identity.

Audi Q3 Vail Concept previews Audi Q3 RS +video

Mon, 09 Jan 2012

Audi Q3 Vail Concept The Audi Q3 Vail Concept – revealed at the Detroit Auto Show – gets a winter theme and previews the RS-engined hot Q3 Audi are planning. The Interwebs decided this last few days that the Audi Q3 Vail would be a two-door coupe version of the Q3 – a mini X6, for want of a better comparison. But it’s not.

Project Car Hell, Unidentifiable German Coupes Edition: Borgward Isabella Coup

Thu, 08 May 2014

Welcome back to Project Car Hell, where every iron atom always finds the oxygen it seeks, every vehicle ran when parked, and the parts you need are always in another continent! Last week, we got all patriotic with a couple of classic American muscle cars, and that just whetted our appetite for cars that were smaller and more, you know, German. We gave you a tough choice between a couple of air-cooled Volkswagens not long ago, but this time we're interested in German marques that disappeared in the 1960s: NSU and Borgward.