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Firestone Complete Auto Care: Your Source For Tires And Repairs At 1001 N Beckley Ave In Desoto Come in to your nearest Firestone Complete Auto Care at 1001 N Beckley Ave for all your car care needs. Find a StoreFirestone Complete Auto Care , Get DirectionsHours SunMonTueWedThuFriSatEmergency Closure: Store #21997 Professional Auto Repair From Firestone Complete Auto Care At Firestone Complete Auto Care, we have been leading the automotive service industry since we began in 1926. If you think your car could have a problem, our auto care teammates can offer a 19-point inspection, at no cost to you. We'll examine oil level, steering, hoses, and more. Additionally, we're devoted to giving you the best service possible, all at reasonable prices and a short waiting time. Get Tire Pricing Discover Our Range of Auto Repair Services With 90 years in the car care service industry, we've seen nearly every problem your car or truck could have. At Firestone Complete Auto Care, we strive to provide unparalleled auto repair and maintenance.

Our services are backed by our Fixed Right Guarantee, meaning that every service or repair we do will be fixed correctly the first time. Customer Reviews (5) 55 55 55 55 15 55 55 45 55 25 25 25 55 35 35 55 45 45 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 35 55 45 45 55 55 55 55 15 55 55 55 45 15 55 45 Find The Firestone Complete Auto Care Location Nearest You Firestone Complete Auto Care, Get Directions(972) 892-9207HoursFirestone Complete Auto Care, Get Directions(972) 892-9206HoursFirestone Complete Auto Care, Get Directions(972) 730-9181HoursFirestone Complete Auto Care, Get Directions(972) 268-9325HoursUpdated on Jan. 9 by Naheed Rajwani: Revised to include comments from the Council on American-Islamic Relations. Updated on Jan. 8 by Julie Fancher: Revised to include new details from police about shooting A man suspected of fatally shooting a 25-year-old and critically injuring a Middle Eastern man at a Pleasant Grove tire shop on Christmas Eve yelled “Muslim” as he shot, Dallas police said Friday.

Police said around 3:45 p.m. on Christmas Eve, Anthony Paz Torres, 30, had driven to Omar’s Wheels and Tires in the 3700 block of South Buckner Boulevard to pump air in his black Chevrolet Cruz and ask about an employee, according to an arrest affidavit. When employees told Torres the employee was not there, he allegedly walked back to his car, took out a gun and started shooting at the customers as they stood in the front of the tire shop, police said. According to police, Torres made comments and “specifically used the word ‘Muslim’ as he was shooting.” Enrique Garcia-Mendoza, who was sitting in a Mitsubishi parked in front of the shop, was struck and died immediately. The other man, who has not been identified, was shot in the chest. Several others had minor injuries. The owner of the shop fired back at Torres as he tried to flee, police said. Police later found Torres, who had apparently been shot several times, at Baylor University Medical Center.

He reportedly told the hospital’s medical staff he had gotten in an argument while filling air at the tire shop and got involved in a gun fight when the person he was arguing with pulled out a gun, the arrest affidavit states. According to police, the employees recognized Torres as having been involved in a disturbance with another employee a week earlier and warned the owner of the shop that Torres might be dangerous.
Smoked Hickory Laminate Flooring Police looked into that disturbance and found body-cam video from patrol officers where Torres said he was both Jewish and Christian and said he had a bias against Muslims.
Goodyear Tires For 2005 Honda Pilot Torres has been charged with murder and aggravated assault.
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He is being held in the Dallas County Jail. Bail was set at $500,000. Police said they expect to file more charges against Torres. The Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Dallas office issued a statement on Jan. 9, calling on federal authorities to join the investigation into the shooting. “Whenever any Americans are attacked based on their actual or perceived race or religion, that attack should be treated as domestic terrorism and investigated accordingly,” Alia Salem, the executive director of CAIR-DFW, was quoted saying in the statement. Maj. Max Geron, a Dallas police spokesman, said on social media that police had been in touch with their federal partners. It appears Garcia-Mendoza, who died in the shooting, was a bystander who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Garcia-Mendoza had a flat tire Christmas Eve and had gone to Omar’s Wheels and Tires to get it repaired, according to his friends, who asked not to be named in fear of retaliation.

Garcia-Mendoza, known as “Kike,” worked at a tattoo parlor in North Oak Cliff and often practiced his designs on his friends — and on paper — outside of work. He wanted to own his own tattoo parlor someday, his friends said. Best Of :: Shopping & Services D-Town Tires and Car Wash So you want your ride to shine but you don't have the time or energy to do it yourself. Don't bother with one of those gas station assembly-line washes when, for a few bucks more, you could not only get a hand-polished gleam on the outside, but have the interior vacuumed as well—without having one of those automated brush wheels snap off your antenna. On Tuesdays and Wednesdays, this Oak Cliff and West Dallas franchise offers $11.99 inside-and-outside washes. Not only that, but most days it offers oil changes for less than $20. Combine that with the discount wash and you can get out for just over $30—which would only get you one or the other almost anywhere else. 2410 Singleton Blvd., Dallas, 75212

You'll take credit for the good taste when your giftee thanks you for the gift, but deep down in your heart, you'll know it was all Vynsie, Jully and Derek Law making you look good. Sifting through the latest design trends from New York to San Francisco to Tokyo, but always most enthused about handmade local stuff, the folks at We Are 1976 keep their shop turning over with a fresh stock of sleek, useful things for the kitchen or office, books and zines, toy cameras and miniature creations for the sophisticated man or woman of the world who still likes to get down and play with little toy guys on their desk. From J-Pop to steampunk, the stock's always in small batches so you can bet on uncovering something new on each visit. It's also home to great craft classes and workshops from local designers, plus the best stock of Japanese sodas this side of Garland. 1902 N. Henderson Ave., Dallas, 75206 Johnny Rodriguez the Salon Always on the lookout for a way to improve on what's already the best place to get your hair cut, colored and styled, Johnny Rodriguez now has a blow-dry bar at his award-winning salon.

So what's a blow-dry bar? It's actually pretty simple. You drop by the Inwood Village Shopping Center. You get your hair washed. And then you choose one of four blowouts with names like "The Drop-Dead Gorgeous" and "The Big & Beautiful." Of course, this pampering comes at a price: anywhere from $35 to $55 "and up." Then again, Rodriguez has never been confused for Pro-Cuts. 5403 W. Lovers Lane, Dallas, 75209 Gratitude Vintage Apparel & Nostalgia At first glance, Gratitude Vintage looks like any number of vintage shops around town with each of its many rooms filled with racks of clothes, baskets of belts, stacks of vinyl records and display cases teeming with knickknacks, baubles and trinkets. But as you make your way from room to room, soon you'll notice the hats. Some are hung on display racks, but the majority are hanging from the walls–taking up nearly every square—well, round—inch of space. Known for its hat selection, the Oak Lawn-area shop typically boasts a revolving cast of 300 to 400, ranging in price from a few bucks to as high as $300 for some rare designer domes.

But, luckily, the vast majority of the hats are tagged at under $40. This year marked Gratitude's 20th anniversary, though in 2008 owner Marion Weger moved the shop to a larger, swankier spot a few blocks away from the original location. 3613 Fairmount St., Dallas, 75219 It was so traumatic for Old East Dallas—the whole closing of Dallas' first Whole Foods on Lower Greenville Avenue. Sort of like what the closing of the Metropolitan Museum might be for Manhattan. Then they opened the new store on Abrams and called it "Lakewood"—a knife in the heart for Bohemians. Might as well have called it "Country Club Whole Foods." But at least Whole Foods has honored its East Dallas origins by maintaining what has to be the city's finest selection of granolas. We counted 79 varieties of packaged granola on a recent visit, and that didn't even include the bulk bins where you can mix up your own. In that sense it's still an East Dallas store, even if you do have fend your way past a lot of sweaty 9-year-olds in golf cleats to get to the granola section.

2118 Abrams, Dallas, 75214 Designing home interiors is only one aspect of 25-year-old SMU grad Doniphan Moore's many talents. He's more of a life stylist, working with design-challenged clients at all budget levels to unify their aesthetic senses, from furnishings to wardrobe to personal style. His own taste fits somewhere between clean traditionalist and soft modern, with a touch of the eccentric. "I embrace the human element of a home," he says, "and don't steer away from the messiness of everyday life. If a bed has to be made up to look good, it's a shame." He's done high-end interiors, low-end home offices, magazine shoots, weddings, floral designs and head-to-toe makeovers. Moore does it all with a keen eye for bargains and it doesn't hurt that he is even funnier and cuter than Oprah's design guru, Nate Berkus. Our crystal ball (which Moore helped us find in a consignment store) predicts that he'll be a major design star too, sooner than later. Best Car Wash: D-Town Tires and Car Wash