U.S. Sues Operators Of Pirate Texas Station Known As ‘Alex Jones Radio’

An antenna tower is seen at the Orchard Plaza apartment building in Austin in 2014, the year the FCC imposed a penalty on the building’s owners for operating a pirate radio station.

Google Maps/Screenshot by NPR


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Google Maps/Screenshot by NPR

An antenna tower is seen at the Orchard Plaza apartment building in Austin in 2014, the year the FCC imposed a penalty on the building’s owners for operating a pirate radio station.

Google Maps/Screenshot by NPR

The U.S. government says the operators of a station considered the “flagship” radio outlet for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones must pay a $15,000 FCC penalty for broadcasting without a license. The station’s operators have rejected the demand and accuse the FCC of “trying to run a bluff.”

To collect the debt, the Justice Department recently filed a civil suit against Walter Olenick and M. Rae Nadler-Olenick, demanding the married couple pay the FCC’s penalty “for willful and repeated violation” of U.S. law. They’re accused of operating a pirate radio station — Texas Liberty Radio has been unlicensed at least since 2013, according to the FCC.

On its website, Texas Liberty Radio says it stopped broadcasting when it lost tower access in December 2017. But for years, the Olenicks have been fighting the FCC’s attempt to enforce federal laws, insisting the agency doesn’t have any power over them.

Texas Liberty Radio is the “Austin flagship” for Jones, according to The Austin American-Statesman. The Associated Press and Inside Radio also referred to it as the flagship — raising the ire of one of the station’s hosts, Danny Sessom, who said late Wednesday night that TXLR only rebroadcasts Jones’ radio show. Calling it anything else, he said, was “actual fake news.”

But in Austin, the 90.1 FM frequency has long been associated with Jones. When the FCC first penalized the Olenicks in 2014, The Austin Chronicle noted that 90.1 “has aired New World Order warnings for more than a decade, earning it the nickname ‘Alex Jones Radio.’ “

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In a string of correspondence with the FCC, the Olenicks dismissed the agency’s claims against them as preposterous and unfounded, saying in essence that they never agreed to be regulated by the U.S. government.

The FCC has been both praised and criticized for acting against the radio station — something that FCC Chairman Ajit Pai brought up Thursday during his (previously planned) testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee.

“It is important to make clear that our pirate radio enforcement efforts — including this one — have nothing to do with the content of pirate radio stations air,” Pai said, according to the FCC’s transcript. “We act against pirate radio station because they are violating the law by broadcasting on the FM airwaves without a license.”

In the Austin case, Pai noted, the station’s operators were fined only after they ignored a warning to stop broadcasting illegally.

The case began in 2013, when the FCC received a complaint about an illegal transmission on the 90.1 frequency in Austin. The FCC’s enforcement agents used directional equipment to trace the source of the rogue signal to a 50-foot tower erected at a property owned by the Olenicks. The tower’s antenna was wired to equipment in a utility or maintenance room, the agents said.

They also “observed a vehicle bearing a bumper sticker reading “Liberty 90.1 FM” parked in front.” The agents used county records to determine who owned the property.

In September 2013, the FCC sent a letter to Olenick and Nadler-Olenick, warning them of the penalties of running an unlicensed radio station and giving them 10 days to respond.

The pair sent a rather extraordinary response, alternately telling the agency, “kindly never bother us with your harassment under color of law and office again” — and that if the FCC wanted to communicate further, “knock yourself out.”

The demands in the FCC’s letter were “facially preposterous,” the Olenicks wrote.

The couple also seemed to assert rights reserved for foreign states, telling the FCC, “We expect that letters so addressed would more properly come from your company’s International Bureau and then only after there’s been some treaty of other discovered to which we are signators.”

It’s unclear whether the Olenicks might adhere to the belief, long-held among some Texans, that the state should operate as a republic rather than as a full member of the United States. The FCC’s letter, we’ll note, was sent to the couple’s P.O. box in Austin.

The Olenicks closed their letter by informing the FCC’s enforcement bureau that its agents did not have permission to enter or visit their property, implying they would thereafter be considered trespassers.

A string of further letters followed much the same pattern, and in early 2014, the FCC imposed the $15,000 penalty. The Olenicks didn’t pay, and in November of that year, the agency sent a letter threatening to bring in the Justice Department.

Instead of seeing the penalty notice as an official warning of impending action, the Olenicks said they took a different view of the FCC’s citation of federal regulations.

They wrote: “We look at the same compilation of words and see Monte Hall’s, ‘Let’s Make a Deal!’, i.e., an offer. We decline your offer, as we have from the outset, and we will forever decline your offer.”

The Olenicks repeatedly referred to the FCC as a company, as when they stated in a letter to Susan Launer, the FCC’s deputy associate general counsel, “We dispute (your company’s) claim in its entirety, for reasons already documented in our prior correspondence.”

In that letter, the Olenicks also wrote, “Obviously, we’ll be sending no check to anyone in response to your continued mail fraud conspiracy.”

They accused the FCC of trying to conjure a justification for the penalty, calling it “a conspiracy … to harass us and to intimidate us for and in retaliation of our very well documented assertion of our ‘right not to contract.’ “

The FCC penalty has now gone unpaid for four years, and the Justice Department filed a civil suit in federal court last week to collect the debt.

That federal action comes after several large tech companies recently either banned or limited Jones’ ability to use their platforms to air his shows. Twitter is the latest company to punish the conspiracy theorist, revoking some of Jones’ privileges for breaking its rules against abusive behavior.

Jones and others at his Infowars media company have said they’re being censored and deprived of their right to free speech. They also say the moves targeting Jones have been timed to coincide with the run-up to the midterm elections, now less than three months away.

In videos posted to Twitter and elsewhere, Jones has told his followers to go directly to his website, to watch or listen to his show through online streaming.

Article source: https://www.npr.org/2018/08/16/639239647/u-s-sues-operators-of-radio-station-that-airs-alex-jones-show-saying-it-s-not-li?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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