| Image | Item | Price | Bids | Left Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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Keyless entry Remote Start System VIPER 4103 2000 ft of range 2 remotes | $57.00 | 18d 17h 55m | |
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VIPER SMART START REMOTE START MODULE!!! VSM-200 | $119.00 | 1 | 1d 11h 30m |
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VIPER 1-Way SuperCode Remote Start System, Model 5101, 2 Remotes Included | $56.00 | 6 | 3d 8h 6m |
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Keyless entry Remote Start System VIPER 5501 1 mile of range LCD 2 way | $149.88 | 15d 16h 32m | |
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Pink Viper 5701 Limited Edition car alarm / remote start | $250.00 | 0 | 2d 18h 27m |
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Viper 4103XV 4-Button 1-way Remote Start System with Keyless Entry | $74.99 | 22d 8h 23m | |
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Refurbished Viper 5501 (P/N 4702v) Remote Car Start | $100.99 | 2 | 2d 19h 35m |
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Keyless entry Remote Start System VIPER 5101 2000 ft of range 2 remotes | $64.98 | 20d 20h 8m | |
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VIPER 5101 Remote Start | $31.00 | 6 | 3d 13h 19m |
ALEXANDRIA, Va., May 18 -- The trademark VIPER (Reg. No. 3958045) was issued on May 10 by the USPTO.
Owner: Amphenol Corporation CORPORATION DELAWARE 18 Celina Avenue Nashua NEW HAMPSHIRE 03063.
The trademark application serial number 77231561 was filed on July 17, 2007 and was registered on May 10.
Goods and Services: Electrical connectors used in conjunction with optical or high frequency fast data rate cables for data transmission, specifically excluding connectors for use with vehicle, home or commercial, brick and mortar security, remote start, automotive tracking, vehicle or home audio products. FIRST USE: 20090112. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20090112
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Read more » While at DHS, Johnson and his team wrote the April 7, 2009 report, " Right-wing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment ." The report, which was intended for law enforcement only, was quickly leaked and caused a firestorm among some on the political right who accused DHS of painting all kinds of conservatives as potential Timothy McVeighs. In fact, it had merely pointed out that some domestic extremists focused on single issues like immigration and abortion and also noted that extremists were interested in recruiting military veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Its analysis of the causes of the surge of right-wing radicalism -- the election of the nation's first black president and the economy, among other things -- still seems completely accurate and is in line with similar findings by the Southern Poverty Law Center. But DHS ultimately reacted to criticism from conservative columnists and groups like the American Legion by withdrawing the report. (Ironically, given the criticism of his report, Johnson describes himself as a registered Republican who "personifies conservativism.") In the months following the leak, Johnson says in the interview below, DHS gutted its domestic terrorism analysis unit.