[quote="cyclops1970]Let's not forget that the FCC operates outside the normal legal system, so normal legal definitions don't apply.[/quote]
Those laws and the definitions therein most certainly do apply - including rights of the accused to access court dockets, be present or respresented at evidentiary hearings, the right to a fair trial, appeals before an administrative law judge and so forth. You might be thinking of the NTIA, whose authority lies outside of that granted to the FCC...and does tend to operate differently.
In the hypothetical above, how would the freebander know to implicate Joe Ham unless the freebander knew he was being listened to in first place?
He wouldn't, unless the ham first acknowledged the fact. As far as I know - and I will attempt to verify this - licensees in the amateur radio service are under no obligation whatsoever to report infractions that occur in other radio services.
True, but I believe transmissions containing information relating to illegal activites are exempt.
Again...I will verify this, either via consultation with an attorney who specializes in telecommunications law -or- with a little online law-library research.
And the FCC has said on numerous occasions that so called pirate or freeband stations have no legal rights whatsoever to occupy a frequency. So I would think that the exemption would apply there as well.
True - when dealing with an incursion into the amateur bands - but AFAIK not true when non-amateur allocations are concerned.
It would be interesting to see what Riley would say on that...
Depending on my schedule tomorrow I may make a call...but I'm guessing that the conversation will go as follows:
Unless a given procedure, law or regulation is explicitly spelled out in Part 97; CFR 47, a U.S.-licensed amateur radio operator is under no obligation to follow such...nor does he or she have legal responsibility or authority to act as an agent for a licensee or licensees of another radio service when it comes to interference resolution. That is, unless said interference extends to a frequency which is part of a service in which the individual holds a license...