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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
The court finds Jason R. Humphreys apparently liable for a forfeiture of
$48,000 for using a cell phone jammer in his car during his daily commute between Seffner and Tampa, Florida. Mr. Humphreys' illegal operation of the jammer apparently continued for up to two years, caused actual interference to cellular service along a swath of Interstate 4. (a) Penalty of $16,000 for jamming law enforcement frequencies, plus (b) Penalty of $16,000 for jamming cellphone frequencies, plus (c) Penalty of $16,000 for operating that same jammer for two years. -------------------------------------------------------------- http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/...C-14-55A1.html -------------------------------------------------------------- On April 29, 2013, the Enforcement Bureau (Bureau) received a complaint from Metro PCS that its cell phone tower sites had been experiencing interference during the morning and evening commutes in Tampa, Florida. Based on the location of the towers and the times that the alleged interference occurred, the Bureau determined that the likely source of the interference was mobile along Interstate 4 between downtown Tampa and Seffner, Florida. On May 7, 2013, agents from the Bureau's Tampa Office (Tampa Office) initiated an investigation into this matter and monitored the suspected route. On May 7, 8, and 9, 2013, the agents determined, using direction finding techniques, that strong wideband emissions within the cellular and PCS bands (i.e., the 800 MHz to 1900 MHz band) were emanating from a blue Toyota Highlander sport utility vehicle (SUV) with a Florida license plate. On May 9, 2013, the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office (Hillsborough Sheriff), working closely with the agents from the Tampa Office, stopped the Toyota Highlander SUV. The Hillsborough Sheriff deputies reported that communications with police dispatch over their 800 MHz two-way portable radios were interrupted as they approached the SUV. The agents from the Tampa Office and the Hillsborough Sheriff deputies interviewed the driver, who identified himself as Jason Humphreys. Mr. Humphreys admitted that he owned and had operated a cell phone jammer from his car for the past 16 to 24 months. An inspection of the vehicle revealed the cell phone jammer behind the seat cover of the passenger seat. Mr. Humphreys stated that he had been operating the jammer to keep people from talking on their cell phones while driving. At the conclusion of the interview, the Hillsborough Sheriff deputies seized Mr. Humphreys' cell phone jammer pursuant to Florida state law. On the following day, May 10, 2013, Metro PCS confirmed that the interference to its cell towers had ceased. On June 14, 2013, agents from the Tampa Office tested the seized cell phone jammer and confirmed that it was capable of jamming cellular and PCS communications in at least three frequency bands: 821-968 MHz, 1800-2006 MHz, and 2091-2180 MHz. |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
On 2014-11-20, Abe Swanson > wrote:
> The court finds Jason R. Humphreys apparently liable for a forfeiture of > $48,000 for using a cell phone jammer in his car during his daily commute > between Seffner and Tampa, Florida. Mr. Humphreys' illegal operation of > the jammer apparently continued for up to two years, caused actual > interference to cellular service along a swath of Interstate 4. > > (a) Penalty of $16,000 for jamming law enforcement frequencies, plus > (b) Penalty of $16,000 for jamming cellphone frequencies, plus > (c) Penalty of $16,000 for operating that same jammer for two years. > -------------------------------------------------------------- > http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/...C-14-55A1.html > -------------------------------------------------------------- I wonder how many 911 calls this ****er prevented with his antisocial antics. If even just one he should be looking at jail time, IMO. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
On Thu, 20 Nov 2014 23:59:23 +0000, Lewis wrote:
> He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would be > first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. These guys did the same thing, only it was a business doing the jamming, instead of a driver, and it was AT&T instead of T-Mobile. http://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-prop...ee-cell-phones |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
On 11/20/2014 6:59 PM, Lewis wrote:
> > He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would be > first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. > Let me guess... You stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night? |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
On 11/21/2014 10:18 AM, Lewis wrote:
> Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >> On 11/20/2014 6:59 PM, Lewis wrote: >>> >>> He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would be >>> first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. > >> Let me guess... You stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night? > > What are you talking about? > Your "legal training" |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking on cellphones while driving
On Fri, 21 Nov 2014 12:36:01 -0500, News > wrote:
>On 11/21/2014 10:18 AM, Lewis wrote: >> Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >>> On 11/20/2014 6:59 PM, Lewis wrote: >>>> >>>> He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would be >>>> first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. >> >>> Let me guess... You stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night? >> >> What are you talking about? >> > Still way outside at the very least. Explain please. > >Your "legal training" |
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking oncellphones while driving
On 2014-11-22, Lewis > wrote:
> Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >> On 11/21/2014 10:18 AM, Lewis wrote: >>> Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >>>> On 11/20/2014 6:59 PM, Lewis wrote: >>>>> >>>>> He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would be >>>>> first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. >>> >>>> Let me guess... You stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night? >>> >>> What are you talking about? > >> Your "legal training" > > A death during the commission of a crime is first degree murder > regardless of the circumstances or cause of the death. This is true here > in Colorado, is true in California, and as I understand it is true in > Florida. > > So, if you rob a store and the clerk dies of a heart attack, that is > first degree murder. > > Jamming cellphone signals is illegal,. The jammer also jams emergency > vehicle communications. If that jamming caused *in any way* a person to > die, then the person jamming the signals could be charged with first > degree murder. I guess I'm being dense; but I don't see the connection to Holiday Inn Express... -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#9
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking on cellphones while driving
In article >,
Lewis > wrote: > Okay, > Jamming cellphone signals is illegal,. The jammer also jams emergency > vehicle communications. If that jamming caused *in any way* a person to > die, then the person jamming the signals could be charged with first > degree murder. And it could very easily be a Federal charge since cell phones come under the umbrella of the FCC -- łStatistics are like bikinis. What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.˛ ‹ Aaron Levenstein |
#10
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Guy gets caught while trying to stop drivers from talking on cellphones while driving
"Lewis" > wrote in message ... > Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >> On 11/21/2014 10:18 AM, Lewis wrote: >>> Okay, so one time? In band camp? News > was all, like: >>>> On 11/20/2014 6:59 PM, Lewis wrote: >>>>> >>>>> He was very lucky. Had anyone died because of his actions that would >>>>> be >>>>> first degree murder, which is still a capital offense in Florida. >>> >>>> Let me guess... You stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night? >>> >>> What are you talking about? > >> Your "legal training" > > A death during the commission of a crime is first degree murder > regardless of the circumstances or cause of the death. Wrong when the death is caused by the victim of the crime defending himself. > This is true here in Colorado, is true in California, Fraid not. > and as I understand it is true in Florida. > So, if you rob a store and the clerk dies of > a heart attack, that is first degree murder. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_..._United_States > Jamming cellphone signals is illegal,. The jammer also jams emergency > vehicle communications. If that jamming caused *in any way* a person to > die, then the person jamming the signals could be charged with first > degree murder. Wrong. |
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