Government auctions can seem awfully intriguing. After all, these are places where people can bid on seized and surplus cars, homes, boats, jewelry, furniture and other property – sometimes for a ...
Rolex watches seized from drug lords. Homes confiscated from tax cheats. Blackhawk helicopters the military no longer needs. The federal government is auctioning off all this — and more. The “more” ...
For most people trawling government auctions, the listing would not have stood out: GSA Auctions, a division of the General Services Administration, was offering up a vehicle described simply as a ...
Buying a used car from the government can be an affordable way to find a reliable vehicle for under $8,000. Various government agencies auction off surplus and retired fleet vehicles through platforms ...
The U.S. government will auction 4.94 BTC worth over $300,000 in the next few days. The auction will be held by GSA Auctions, the federal government’s online clearinghouse for surplus, U.S.-owned ...
During this year, which happens to be the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin, it is just possible that some version of the “survival of the fittest” dynamic might begin to appear in the ...
Government agencies across the United States periodically auction firearms, offering licensed gun dealers an opportunity to purchase surplus and seized weapons. GovDeals, a government surplus auction ...
Government auctions are a great way to pick up cars on the cheap, but even they have their limits. You might find cars going for just a few hundred dollars, but you're not likely to find them selling ...
The auction business is nothing new to the General Services Administration. For years, eager deal-seekers have been crowding into cold warehouses to bid on surplus government property and seized items ...