[Scan-DC] scanbaltimore.com

Doorgunner doorgunner666 at msn.com
Wed Jan 14 00:56:23 EST 2015


Alan, any website or email where we could send our words or support to Ben??
Thanks, Paul Richards

-----Original Message----- 
From: Alan Henney
Sent: Tuesday, January 13, 2015 9:56 PM
To: Scan DC
Subject: [Scan-DC] scanbaltimore.com


City Paper (Baltimore, Maryland)

January 12, 2015

Ben Shane's website makes the Baltimore Police scanner public

BYLINE: Nathan Glover, CITY PAPER

SECTION: CITY FOLK

LENGTH: 1016 words

The scanner radio sits against the windowsill, its antenna pointed upward, 
its face glowing. The Uniden BCD396XT doesn't look much different from a 
walkie-talkie, small enough to fit in the palm of your hand, with a silver 
face and black trim along the sides. Black wires stretch from the sill along 
the off-white office wall, connecting the scanner to a computer drive lying 
on the blue carpet. Though the speaker grill is silent, the audio 
feed--police dispatches, scene descriptions, and other general radio chatter 
from the Baltimore Police Department--streams through the computer to Scan 
Baltimore (scanbaltimore.com), a website which exists to stream "live 
Baltimore City Police Department (BPD) radio transmissions for all to hear."

Ben Shayne, the 38-year-old Woodberry resident who operates Scan Baltimore, 
has always had an affinity for technical hardware, with a special connection 
to police scanners in particular. Sitting in a booth near the entrance to 
Frazier's, Shayne says it started with visits to his maternal grandfather, 
who purchased a police scanner when his mother first moved from Brooklyn to 
the city to attend Notre Dame of Maryland University. "Growing up, I would 
spend nights at my grandparents' house, and he always had the scanner on," 
says Shayne. "I would fall asleep listening to the police scanner as 
background noise. It was always very comforting for me."

Later, Shayne's interest in scanners continued as he made his way through 
various information-technology-related jobs, including his current one 
handling IT and security management for Johns Hopkins University. 
Eventually, he purchased a scanner for himself, but didn't begin sharing his 
audio feed through Scan Baltimore until around 2006, when he decided to do a 
favor for a friend of his who was a local crime blogger with Baltimore Crime 
(baltimorecrime.blogspot.com). "She would often lament that she couldn't get 
one working at home and listen to it there," he says. "Working with 
computers and IT, I thought to myself, 'Why couldn't I stream over the 
internet?' That's where Scan Baltimore started."

He has continued maintenance on the site since then, but says that it's 
mostly a side hobby he doesn't think about too often. But Shayne, who once 
owned the nationalbohemian.com domain name, admits that he enjoys "having a 
site that attracted Baltimore fans."

He does receive occasional emails, most of which he says are supportive, 
though a few are critical or claim that keeping the website up is breaking 
the law. According to the Federal Communications Commission's current 
interpretation of Section 705 of the Communications Act, however, "mere 
interception of radio communications" related to emergency services such as 
police or fire departments is legal, leaving those who operate scanners such 
as Shayne's in the clear unless the scanners are being used in the 
commission of crimes such as recording wireless phone conversations or 
stealing cable, for example. As for local law, it depends on the state or 
jurisdiction, and Maryland and Baltimore currently do not prohibit the use 
or ownership of scanners for noncriminal purposes.

Still, Shayne is sensitive to some of the critical emails he's received. 
"I'm not trying to get anybody hurt, and I'm not anti-police," he says. 
"There are some transmissions I don't broadcast, like transmissions for the 
narcotics squads or special squads. All you are hearing is the standard 
district traffic, and that is to keep things on the up and up. I just kind 
of keep it generic." (The Baltimore Police Department did not immediately 
respond to emails asking for comment and they recently asked Ian Duncan to 
cease live tweeting their scanner during a protest.)

Many of the site's supporters are actually family or friends of police 
officers who like to hear if their loved ones are OK. Other supporters share 
Shayne's interest in scanners and technology. "Most of the emails I get are 
from people asking how to setup their own scanner," he says. "The vast 
majority of my correspondence goes, 'I have a scanner. Can you help me?'"

One of the people Shayne helped was Justin Fenton, a crime reporter at the 
Sun. In 2013, the BPD upgraded its radio equipment, which rendered the Sun's 
scanner equipment useless. "As far back as anyone can remember, we got our 
equipment through the Police Department," Fenton writes in an email. "But 
they wanted to charge us thousands of dollars, and that wasn't going to 
happen. Instead I bought a Radio Shack scanner, and Ben was really helpful 
in talking through what to expect."

Having access to the scanner is essential to Fenton's job. "With the degree 
of difficulty these days in getting information through official channels," 
says Fenton, whose questions the BPD refused to address for a period of time 
last year, "the scanner is an important tool, and I think Ben provides a 
public service by putting it online."

Eric Eberhardt is the Oakland, California-based creator of 
youarelistening.to, a website which streams audio from online police 
scanners based in different cities across the country and couples them with 
jazz and electronic music to create ambient soundscapes. The Baltimore 
version of the site uses Scan Baltimore's feed, which Eberhardt happened 
across while adding feeds to his site. "Many people who have contacted me 
about the site seem to be kind of shocked that listening to scanner audio is 
legal," Eberhardt writes in an email. "And I think it's interesting to 
consider why people would make that assumption in a country founded on 
principles of free speech, government transparence, [sic] and similar 
ideals."

Though Shayne didn't start Scan Baltimore for such high-minded reasons, he 
does like the transparency of hearing what the city's public servants maybe 
up to or dealing with, even if with some modesty. "It comes in handy living 
in Baltimore City," he says while finishing up his pint of Guinness. "I like 
to have access if there's a bunch of police on my street, and I like to know 
what's going on. So I turn on one of my radios, but outside of that, it's 
not a big deal."

LOAD-DATE: January 13, 2015

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

GRAPHIC: Ben Shayne of Scan Baltimore
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