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Judgment Time: 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge

This eye popping 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge has been owned by the same family since 1988. It was sold new in Meade, Kansas at McPheter Pontiac and spent most of its life in Oklahoma. The car is listed for auction here on eBay and is currently bid to $57,500. It would not be surprising to see this car reach 6 digits based on recent auction results and the fact that it is a 4 speed. The car is currently located in Rogers, Arkansas. There are 5 days remaining in the auction.

The car has been sitting for several years before the seller recently acquired it. The car was restored but it is an older restoration. The original Ram Air III 400 cubic inch V8 engine is no longer in the car but the block was replaced with a WT 400 cubic inch V8 block. The factory engine was rated at 366 horsepower. The engine is backed by the original Muncie 4 speed transmission and power is shared to the rear tires via a 3.55:1 rear end ratio. The car is a factory Judge with power steering, power brakes and hood tach.

The seller has the Pontiac Historical Services (PHS) documentation that indicates the car was an early pattern car built int he 3rd week of March 1969. The black interior shows well with a little fading evident in the carpet. The odometer shows 32k miles and the seller said he or she can provide a video of the car running as well as a video of the undercarriage.

As Pontiac enthusiasts know, the Judge package started in 1969 and was intended to be a low cost GTO. However, the package was popular and cost $332 more than a standard GTO. Some unique features of the Judge was the Code 72 Carousel Red paint, Rally II wheels with no trim rings, Hurst shifter, decals and rear spoiler. Midway through 1969 the Judge was offered in other colors

Comments

  1. Avatar photo He is the Judge Baby!

    Finally a real Judge in good shape

    I luv it !

    Like 0
  2. Avatar photo Carl hodge

    Mine had the tach built in the dash, it was one of those mid year cars and was called a 68 and a half, wish I still had it and my 67.

    Like 0
  3. Avatar photo Davey Boy

    me likee a lottt!!! my dream car under a 70 440 4 speed gtx.

    Like 5
  4. Avatar photo Cooter Member

    I could’ve bought this car’s twin in 1986—only it was numbers matching car for $4,500! It was owned by a coworker of mine and a man from Michigan drove down and took it away, along with a blue Lemans parts car.

    Like 9
  5. Avatar photo Butch Smith

    One just sold on Barrett-jackson the other day for … wait for it….$250,000!

    Like 6
  6. Avatar photo Jeffrey V.

    Nice GTO Judge, serious collectors want the RAM air IV which brings the “big bucks”.

    Like 0
  7. Avatar photo Timmyt

    Barrett Jackson is the high bidder

    Like 1
  8. Avatar photo Edward Rotenbury

    I have never seen a Pontiac motor painted orange ! I think that this would lower the value of this car ! I owned a ’69 GTO 366hp 4sp no tach no spoiler . I think the car put out about 400hp with headers ! What is a WT 400 ?

    Like 0
  9. Avatar photo PRA4SNW

    Watching BJ auction right now, makes this Judge look like a bargain. You’re not touching an old muscle car unless you have 150 – 200K. Crazy!!!!!

    Like 1
  10. Avatar photo Michael Berkemeier

    Not numbers-matching and, what? No Safe-T-Track differential, lol!!! I would not want this one, if I were in the market. That is so lame. Can you imagine a 4-speed Judge…you pull up to the light, dump the clutch and eveyone laughs at your one-tire fire?

    Like 0
    • Avatar photo John Griff

      Not too hard or expensive to swap out the rear end, nice looking car. Needs AC for me, in Florida

      Like 0
  11. Avatar photo Rick R

    I bought a new gto in 1968 and I believe it was close to 3k I’m not sure of the exact amount, (over 54 years ago) the 70 judge would have been a few hundred more. They kind of done the roadrunner thing and had the judge pretty stripped down to get rid of some weight. I just threw this in so you you younger folks would have an idea what these cars sold for new back in the day. Around $25,000.00 in today’s money.

    Like 0

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