[TWIAR] Radio operator sends vulgarities to nearby homes

Greg Williams k4hsm at knology.net
Fri Sep 28 02:16:22 EDT 2007


At first I thought it was another CBer mistaken for Ham operator, but 
from the video off the web site, they never give his name, but they show 
a link to a YouTube video giving his name as Anthony Peluso and his call 
as AB7OP. - Greg

http://www.komotv.com/news/10062921.html

http://youtube.com/watch?v=K9ULiagmC90 - YouTube video the KOMO report 
links to **EXPLICIT LANGUAGE**

EVERETT, Wash. -- Residents of one local community say a neighbor's 
hobby is inadvertently bombarding their homes with obscenities and 
uninvited messages, day in and day out.

Laura Holland says a vulgar rant came through her TV while she was 
watching a movie.

She says the source is her neighbor, a ham radio operator whose strong 
signal feeds every word of his transmissions directly to his neighbors 
every day.

"He's interrupted the middle of the mariners baseball game on the AM 
radio band," said Rick Bowen, a neighbor.

The conversations come through on their TVs, telephones and even their 
karaoke machines.

"My wife and I like to do karaoke and we're the only two, but there's a 
third one and that's him," said one neighbor.

"Any channel I'm watching on TV, I can hear his voice in the 
background," Holland said.

Holland said the string of obscenities that she heard through her TV was 
the last straw.

The radio operator refused to talk to KOMO 4 News, but his reaction to 
the request was heard on Holland's TV.

"Apparently, I make the news again. Hey!" he was heard saying. "This is 
good, I'll start signing autographs for you guys now."

But Holland isn't laughing. Comcast told her a filter might block the 
uninvited noise, but it would also block her cable and Internet as well. 
A technician is scheduled to visit her house to see if anything can be done.

She filed a formal complaint with the FCC, but said all they did was 
send her a generic brochure titled "Identifying the Source of Interference."

The radio operator's son told KOMO 4 News his father has a license and 
is following FCC rules.

However, if the man is indeed broadcasting the vulgarities on amateur 
radio frequencies, he would be in violation of the licensing rules, said 
Allen Pitts, spokesman for the national association for Amateur Radio.

The man is a licensed amateur radio operator, but it's not known what 
frequency the interference is being broadcast on or whether it is part 
of the regulated amateur radio spectrum.

Judging from what came over the airwaves, the conversation is far from over.

"Since the one lady got so nasty, I give. I'm not going to try anymore," 
the operator was heard saying.

"It's almost like he does it to piss people off and that I find rather 
disturbing," Holland said.

-- 

Gregory S. Williams
gregwilliams(at)knology.net
k4hsm(at)knology.net

http://www.etskywarn.net
http://www.twiar.org
http://www.icebearnation.com




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