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Those are usually scams. Try contacting them and their instructions will basically be to separate you from your money before you even get to see the truck. They swipe other people's pictures then make their own ad. Contact one of them and tell them your live in the area, (even if you don't), and would like to see the truck. See how they answer if at all.
Usually scams don't include phone numbers. The area code on the first ad is right for the area. If I was anywhere near there I would be going to look at it.
Those are usually scams. Try contacting them and their instructions will basically be to separate you from your money before you even get to see the truck. They swipe other people's pictures then make their own ad. Contact one of them and tell them your live in the area, (even if you don't), and would like to see the truck. See how they answer if at all.
Another thing I'll often do is find a unique sentence in the ad description and Google it in quotes. You'll sometimes find the same ad running in multiple locations - definite scam.
Someone had a nice Toyota Tacoma for sale on CL near us for about 1/2 of the book value. It was supposedly "his" and "she" was selling it for a bargain due to divorce. I found it listed in several locations.
I'd say the first ad is legit and priced for one of three reasons: 1 - something is seriously wrong with the truck that isn't revealed in the ad, or 2 - they don't know what they've got or do know, but really don't want to deal with it, or 3 - it has an outrageous number of miles on it.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalyptic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.