Experts Sound Alarms Over FCC Searches
Thursday, May 21, 2009
By: David A. Patten
Privacy experts are slamming FCC officials who claim they have broad powers to
enter U.S. homes and to conduct searches without a warrant, if they suspect a
personal electronic device is interrupting other signals.
"Anything using RF [radio frequency] energy, we have the right to inspect it to
make sure it is not causing interference," FCC spokesman David Fiske tells
Wired.com.
That FCC policy dates back to the Communications Act of 1934, which grants the
Commission broad powers to regulate the airwaves, assign frequencies in the
public interest, and ensure broadcasters' transmissions do not interfere with
other stations' signals.
That 1934 Act, however, did not envision a telecommunications environment where
it is common for ordinary homeowners to use a variety of RF-generating devices –
wireless routers, cell phones, wireless phones, even garage-door openers and
baby monitors.
While the FCC continues to maintain it has the right to regulate in-home
transmissions associated with RF-radiating devices, experts in Constitutional
law express grave doubts that warrantless FCC searches – for example a rogue
device causing interference with a local wi-fi operator – would be legal under
the Constitution.
"The Supreme Court has said that the government can't make warrantless entries
into homes for administrative inspections," Orin Kerr, a George Washington
University expert on Constitutional law, tells Wired. In 1967, the Supreme Court
ruled for instance that housing inspectors could not forcibly enter residences
without a warrant, for example.
The current debate over the 75-year-old communications law stems from an FCC
run-in with a Boulder, Colo., radio station that operates without a license:
Boulder Free Radio. The FCC has tried repeatedly to shut down the so-called
"pirate station."
Boulder Free Radio owners have reportedly built a mobile transmitter. Whenever
the FCC serves notice it must be shut down, its owners simply relocate.
Pirate signals can interfere with police, fire department, and other important
transmissions. Once the FCC verifies a station is operating illegally, it will
typically seek a court order shutting the station down, and fines can range up
to $11,000 per day. But it is difficult to prove the law has been violated
without actually inspecting the equipment.
Earlier this month, the FCC shut down a rogue station in Patterson, N.J. whose
salsa-music programming was interfering with New York City radio station WFUV
90.7 FM.
NorthJersey.com reports that after repeated warnings, the FCC asked a federal
District Court to authorize federal agents to enter the station's offices and
seize equipment.
"The equipment used in this type of operation is highly portable," Jafer Aftab,
an assistant U.S. attorney, wrote to the court to justify the seizure request.
"Any delay could result in the removal of the equipment to another location or
concealment…"
The FCC did not respond immediately Thursday to a Newsmax request for more
information on its perceived authority to enter private residences without a
warrant.
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Just for the record, my Glock is certified to not emit radio frequency emissions on any known frequency. It also does not emit lethal projectiles at uniformed law enforcement officers or those presenting a properly endorsed warrant.