[RRDXA] Re: [bcc] Roman Stepanenko, 3W8RR et al.
Andreas Kretzschmar
9Y4ZC at gmx.net
Tue Oct 25 11:25:07 EDT 2005
Leute,
ich denke, das ist keine "Story".
Romeo's Ex-Kumpan RA3AUU, der dieses Jahr mal hier zum Contest war,
hat mir erzaehlt, dass Romeo wegen irgendwas im Gefaengnis sitzt.
Allerdings dachte ich, in Russland. Naja ... Feinheiten.
73 de Andy 9Y4ZC
> --- Ursprüngliche Nachricht ---
> Von: "Ulrich Weiss" <dj2ya at t-online.de>
> An: "BCC-Reflektor" <bcc at bavarian-contest-club.de>, "RRDXA-Reflektor"
> <rrdxa at mailman.qth.net>
> Betreff: [bcc] Roman Stepanenko, 3W8RR et al.
> Datum: Tue, 25 Oct 2005 16:18:06 +0200
>
> hallo DX-Freunde,
>
> im "mediterraneodxclub" fand ich gerade folgende unglaubliche Story über
> Romeo, 3W8RR, dem sicher die meisten von uns ein paar "faule" DXCC-Länder
> verdanken... selbst wenn dieser Romeo nicht unser Romeo wäre, ist die
> Story
> sicher lesenswert....
>
> Uli, DJ2YA
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Tex Kennedy N5TX
> To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
> Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2005 7:11 PM
> Subject: Romeo 3W3RR
>
>
> Incredible story about Romeo 3W3RR
> Forwarded to me tonite...This should be of interest to any DX
> ham...73's....Tex
> Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 10:16:58 -0500
>
> Gather 'round the campfire, boys and girls...
>
> A few months back, I posted a note on the Society of
> Midwest Contesters reflector asking if anybody knew
> the whereabouts of our dear old friend Romeo
> Stepanenko, 3W3RR. As many will recall, Romeo had a
> habit in the late 1980's and early 1990's of popping
> up with his gear from some of the rarest countries in
> the world of ham radio, make tens of thousands of
> contacts, and then getting us armchair DX'ers to flood
> him with requests for QSL cards (which included "green
> stamps") that often came very late or not at all.
> There was also that minor issue of him not being able
> to provide the DXCC administrators with the proper
> documentation from some of his adventures, proving he
> was indeed where he said he was. In the parlance of
> DX'ing, Romeo was the ultimate Slim, a pirate.
>
> I'm a musician, and I figured if ever there was
> somebody that was worthy of a scurvy-dog, sea-shanty
> kind of song, ol' Romeo was that person. There were
> rumors he was a shady character, who showed up at the
> Dayton Hamvention in 1999, years after being expelled
> from DXCC, and then disappeared from the face of the
> Earth. He is the sort that is perfect for song and
> story. I needed factual material for the tune, so I
> started to do my homework. The note to the SMC
> reflector was the beginning of that homework.
>
> I didn't get much response other than a couple of
> notes that said, "Yeah, whatever happened to that
> guy?" So, In July 2005, I posted a note on Eham.com in
> their DX forum, entitled "Wherefore Art Thou, Romeo?"
> Again, no info. So, I started searching on Google. I
> found an article online about ham radio in Afghanistan
> that mentioned him in passing, and a site that had
> several of Romeo's QSL's (including WX9X's fake
> P5/R0MEO card he handed out at Dayton one year). I
> printed the articles and stuck them in my notebook I
> keep for writing lyrics, where they have sat for a
> while, collecting dust. I forgot about it and moved on
> to other projects.
>
> On the evening of October 19, 2005, I received a phone
> call from an inspector with the U.S Postal Service
> based in St. Louis. He said he needed to meet with me
> concerning an investigation of "...one of my
> associates." I obviously made myself available at his
> earliest convenience, which was the next day's lunch
> hour.
>
> I ran over to my friend Matt, NM9H's place. Was he
> trading endangered animals over the Internet?
> Circumnavigating customs laws by importing fresh fruit
> from Venezuela? Ripping tags off of mattresses and
> mailing them to Botswana? He assured me he was doing
> nothing of the sort, as he was "...an old man with a
> house full of kids, with neither the time nor energy
> to be surreptitious."
>
> A night of fitful sleep ensued. We jazz and folk
> musicians have a sordid history in America, often
> lumped together with other unsavories like gangsters,
> communists, and bootleggers. Which of my compadres had
> warranted constabulatory intervention, and how did the
> Postal Service get involved? Besides, my youthful
> indiscretions are long over, as I have nothing to be
> discrete about any longer and I'm closer to
> middle-aged than youthful. In short, like my friend
> NM9H, I'm boring and getting old.
>
> The Inspector came to my place today (20 October
> 2005), and after some pleasantries, asked if the name
> Roman Vega meant anything to me; I truthfully answered
> no. He then asked if I was a ham operator, to which I
> said yes. He then asked if the name Romeo Stepanenko
> meant anything to me, and I nodded uncertainly. The
> Inspector then produced a printout of my Romeo inquiry
> on Eham.com. He said he was following up on an
> investigation from the US Department of Justice in San
> Francisco concerning our beloved Romeo, and he wanted
> to know why I was asking about him in a public forum.
>
> I gave him a Reader's Digest version of ham radio,
> DX'ing, and an overview of the DXCC program. I
> explained how Romeo pretended to operate from various
> exceptionally rare places, duped tens of thousands of
> us into sending him SASE's with green stamps included,
> and was then caught and expelled from the DXCC program
> for these fraudulent ham activities. I explained why
> this caused such a scandal to a program that has had
> an exceedingly high level of ethics and scrutiny
> associated with it over the years. He was quite
> interested in people sending dollars along with QSL
> requests. I explained it was customary to help pay for
> the QSL you're going to receive, especially when
> dealing with an operation from a place as rare as
> Myanmar or North Korea.
>
> I then had to explain to him why I'd want to write a
> song about such an unsavory character. As I explained,
> every hobby or pastime has some level of folklore or
> legend attached to it, and Romeo is one of the most
> infamous characters in the history of DX'ing. In
> baseball, people wrote songs about Jackie Robinson and
> Joltin' Joe. Bob Dylan wrote about Emmett Till. Heck,
> Frank Zappa wrote about a wacko dubbed by the press as
> The Illinois Enema Bandit. Numerous ballads have been
> written about pirates, oddballs, do-gooders and
> ne'er-do-wells in all cultures all around the globe.
> Ham Radio DX'ing may be a small culture in the grand
> scheme of things, but it is a culture nonetheless. It
> stands to reason that, just like any other culture,
> the heroes are glorified and the villains are reviled.
> To me, writing a song about Romeo seemed logical and
> fun.
>
> After an hour of questioning by the Inspector (nice
> guy, by the way), he said it was quite obvious I
> wasn't involved in any of Romeo's current shenanigans,
> and proceeded to tell me The Story:
>
> Roman Vega, aka Romeo Stepanenko, was arrested and
> extradited from Cyprus to the United States in March
> of 2004, and has been charged with 40 counts of wire
> fraud and trafficking in stolen credit card numbers.
> He is alleged to have done this in online chat rooms.
> The Inspector I spoke with indicated that he allegedly
> bilked over $3 million out of this scheme. Romeo has
> pleaded not guilty to all charges. He has been held in
> northern California, as he is considered a flight
> risk. His trial is scheduled to begin in San Francisco
> on Monday, November 28.
>
> Here is a link to the US Department Of Justice press
> release:
>
> http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/can/press/html/2004_06_04_vega.html
>
> Here is a link to the actual indictment filed in
> Federal Court:
>
>
> http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/can/press/assets/applets/2004_06_04_Vega_ind.pdf
>
> As Paul Harvey would say, "Now you know the rest of
> the story."
>
> The Inspector never informed me that I was not allowed
> to discuss this, so I'm posting it here for all to
> see. He indicated the case against Romeo looked quite
> good indeed, and that they were following up on all
> leads they had concerning him. I was "lucky" enough to
> have been considered a Person Of Interest; I got to
> see a copy of my Federal subpoena, where I was
> "commanded" to appear in Federal court on November 28
> at 8:30AM. The Inspector indicated this would probably
> not be needed. He did mention that San Francisco is
> quite nice this time of year, though, and it was
> almost a pity I wouldn't get to take the Government up
> on their free "vacation." I gave him one of those
> nervous smiles and waited for him to move on.
>
> He left me his card, said he'd file his report, and
> told me I'd probably never hear from him again. He did
> give me the case number (Northern District Of
> California CR04-0101 CRD), since it's a matter of
> public record. The fact that I was sitting on the edge
> of my seat as he was telling me this, slack-jawed and
> with my eyes as wide as saucers, might have had
> something to do with him giving me the info as well.
>
> How did I get associated with Romeo? I'm just a ham
> operator who had one QSO with him when he was in
> Vietnam (still my only 3W QSO), spent probably
> hundreds of hours listening for him from his other
> far-flung locales, but never worked him anywhere other
> than 3W. I just happened to ask the right question at
> the wrong time.
>
> It certainly is interesting what bites sometimes when
> you go fishing, eh?
>
> I'm finally recording my solo CD now. I'll be sure to
> let everybody know when it's done. I could use a lead
> player, though; maybe I should give WB6ACU a call...
>
> 73,
>
> Sean Kutzko KX9X
> Gillespie, IL
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> List-archiv: http://www.bavarian-contest-club.de/bcc/ u:bcc p:wabcc
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: bcc-unsubscribe at bavarian-contest-club.de
> For additional commands, e-mail: bcc-help at bavarian-contest-club.de
>
--
Lust, ein paar Euro nebenbei zu verdienen? Ohne Kosten, ohne Risiko!
Satte Provisionen für GMX Partner: http://www.gmx.net/de/go/partner
More information about the RRDXA
mailing list