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To: cva66snipe

I remember being out near Worcester, maybe near the airport, and some kind of spur of an aircraft signal could be briefly heard around 98MHz. And near Boston I was listening to 96.9 when they were talk (WTKK) and heard a brief snippet of aircraft radio chatter suddenly come over it (plane flying over...?)

>>Many years ago right as cell phones started to get popular some older scanners could pick up the cell phone frequencies and because calls were analog everyone could hear them.

The film Sonic Outlaws showed a media satirist group from the Bay Area, Negativland. One member (now “retired”), David “The Weatherman” Wills, was shown using some kind of scanner and he was listening in on a phone conversation. It was a bit of an argument between two men (who, uh, were a bit of a “couple”...again, Bay Area!). Wills looks up at the camera and says “There we go. I think we broke the law, just then...”


114 posted on 04/19/2014 5:09:26 AM PDT by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio; All

Update, Boston Herald

http://bostonherald.com/news_opinion/local_coverage/2014/04/pols_back_dot_radio_station

Bay State politicians are defending an unlicensed radio station that was shut down this week by the Federal Communications Commission, but prosecutors say the crackdown was necessary to prevent a “public safety hazard.”

U.S. Marshals and the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau shut down Touch 106.1 FM, an unlicensed Dorchester station, Thursday and seized radio equipment, according to U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz.

Gov. Deval Patrick yesterday said he was “incredibly disappointed” by the raid and plans to ask the U.S. Attorney’s office to back down.

“You’d like to think of them bringing more of a problem-solving approach,” he said. “Touch is a pretty important voice in the community.”

Other politicians were equally vexed with the decision to shut down the unlicensed station founded by former mayoral candidate Charles Clemons.

“That station is an institution,” said Boston City Councilor Ayanna Pressley. “Myself and other elected officials of color are working collaboratively to apply pressure to lobby the FCC and find out what recourse exists.”

Ortiz defended the crackdown in a statement.

“It is a public safety hazard for illegal radio stations to broadcast, potentially interfering with critical radio communications,” Ortiz said.

Clemons, who founded the station in 2007, said he has not yet retained counsel, but has “received an outpouring of support” from local attorneys “and elected officials.”

He said he was able to get an Internet feed of the station running Thursday night.

“We’re the Rosa Parks of radio right now,” he said. “It’s not right what happened, and we’re going to fight.”

When asked why Touch 106.1 FM did not get a license, Clemons said, “We couldn’t. The FCC has shut it down so no one could apply for a license for 15 years. It’s not fair.”

Ortiz said stations like Clemons’ “could have applied for low power radio licenses and operated their stations in compliance with the law.”


115 posted on 04/19/2014 5:13:38 AM PDT by raccoonradio
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