You are entitled to any property that is not physically attached to the vehicle. In many states, you may remove after market speakers you have installed, provided doing so causes no damage to the vehicle. You will be given only thirty days to recover private property after the vehicle is repossessed.
A disabled person's vehicle can be repossessed just as any other person's vehicle can be repossessed. You must make all payments on your vehicle if you want to keep it.
Yes, you are entitled to get your belongings out of the vehicle, but you will need to check within your state's laws to see if a company can charge you for retrieving your items.
While you are entitled to your personal property that was in the vehicle, the simple fact is that if you can't prove the tools were there you'll probably never see them again.
No, your down payment and any other payment you have made will be put to your subtotal for the car.
It depends on you locatily, but in general, yes, if you are behind on your payment, your vehicle can be repossessed.
Yes you are entitled to your personal possesions. Typically, the rule of thumb is that if it is INSTALLED in the vehicle, it stays in the vehicle unless prior arrangements have been mad with the lienholder or it states otherwise in your contract. If the speakers and amp are just sitting in there, it is considered personal property and they have to let you get them. However, if there is even one screw attaching them to the vehicle, they stay until the lienholder gives the ok to remove them. Best way to get it all back is to pay the lienholder off and get everything back at the same time.
by paying the bill or rebuy it at an aucton
it doesn't matter if the pope takes over your vehicle payments. if he stops making them, your credit is damaged and the vehicle is repossessed.
no!
24/7
Technically (and leagally) yes.
no