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Old April 3rd 05, 03:28 AM
QRM Retest Roger
 
Posts: n/a
Default Goodbye Roger...Why You Lose ISP's


"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...


Stagger Lee wrote:
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005 17:05:38 -0500, Dog wrote:
: : That's a post-edited copy of the *real* letter.

And besides, that's not Roger Wiseman. Therefore, that person has no
access to the original FCC letters; only copies. Now if he *were*
Roger Wiseman, his comments might carry some weight.

But, alas, he isn't. He said so.


http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



Tnx for posting the true AND accurate copies of the FCC letters sent to
Roger, which clearly proves he was retested for repeatedly causing
intentional malicious qrm on 20 meters.



  #2   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 04:18 AM
Joe S.
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Oh, well. I have been absent from this NG for 20 months and return to find
the same children still calling each other names over the same nonsense.
Time to drag the cooler back into the stands and wait a while longer.

It's known as "arrested development" -- some folks just never get out of the
6th grade.
--

-----


"QRM Retest Roger" wrote in message
...

"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...


Stagger Lee wrote:
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005 17:05:38 -0500, Dog wrote:
: : That's a post-edited copy of the *real* letter.

And besides, that's not Roger Wiseman. Therefore, that person has no
access to the original FCC letters; only copies. Now if he *were*
Roger Wiseman, his comments might carry some weight.

But, alas, he isn't. He said so.


http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first

place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to

clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November

in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting

by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants

appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to

contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate

and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has

occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described

could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



Tnx for posting the true AND accurate copies of the FCC letters sent to
Roger, which clearly proves he was retested for repeatedly causing
intentional malicious qrm on 20 meters.





  #3   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 02:20 PM
QRM Retest Roger
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...


Stagger Lee wrote:
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005 17:05:38 -0500, Dog wrote:
: : That's a post-edited copy of the *real* letter.

And besides, that's not Roger Wiseman. Therefore, that person has no
access to the original FCC letters; only copies. Now if he *were*
Roger Wiseman, his comments might carry some weight.

But, alas, he isn't. He said so.


http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



Hearing no further whining from Roger about *random retesting*, based on
the above letters, we now know Wogie was retested because of his repeated
deliberate malicious jamming of ham radio operators on 20 meters.
Case closed.



  #4   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 07:59 PM
QRM Retest Roger
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"QRM Retest Roger" wrote in message
...

"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...


Stagger Lee wrote:
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005 17:05:38 -0500, Dog wrote:
: : That's a post-edited copy of the *real* letter.

And besides, that's not Roger Wiseman. Therefore, that person has no
access to the original FCC letters; only copies. Now if he *were*
Roger Wiseman, his comments might carry some weight.

But, alas, he isn't. He said so.


http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first
place. Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to
clarify the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last
November in response to allegations of deliberate and malicious
interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to
contact him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman
a Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate
and malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



Hearing no further whining from Roger about *random retesting*, based on
the above letters, we now know Wogie was retested because of his repeated
deliberate malicious jamming of ham radio operators on 20 meters.
Case closed.



Spin it any way you want "Not Roger," but the *evidence* is clearly there
for all to see. "....citing EVIDENCE that the licensee..."




  #5   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 08:04 PM
Anonymous Starwars Remailer
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.





  #6   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 08:08 PM
Anonymous Starwars Remailer
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"KC8GXW" wrote in message
...

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



  #7   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 08:11 PM
Lloyd
 
Posts: n/a
Default



http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0503.html
GLENDALE, WV [UPDATE]: The FCC had written General licensee Roger L.
Wiseman, KC8JBO, on March 29, 2000, advising that it had been made aware
of "an ongoing personal dispute" between Wiseman and Advanced licensee
Steven A. Tunder, N8WGM, that included allegations of interference or
jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement
Riley Hollingsworth cautioned Tunder and Wiseman to review §97.1 of the
Amateur Radio rules and "to make certain that whatever disputes that may
exist are not carried over to Amateur Radio frequencies." Hollingsworth
invited the two licensees to contact him to discuss the matter. Wiseman
alleged in a subsequent communication to the ARRL that Tunder had been
harassing him and that he had made the FCC aware of it in the first place.
Wiseman indicated that he had been in touch with Hollingsworth to clarify
the situation. The FCC had sent Wiseman a Warning Notice last November in
response to allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20
meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...2000/0719.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC requested July 11, 2000, that Roger L. Wiseman,
KC8JBO, retake the General examination elements under the supervision of
an ARRL-VEC volunteer examiner team. Wiseman must appear for retesting by
September 11, 2000, or his license will be canceled. Applicants appearing
for re-examination are granted an Amateur Radio license consistent with
the elements passed. The FCC had written Wiseman on March 29, 2000,
advising that it had been made aware of "an ongoing personal dispute"
between Wiseman and another licensee that included allegations of
interference or jamming on 20 meters. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur
Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth invited the two licensees to contact
him to discuss the matter. Additionally, the FCC had sent Wiseman a
Warning Notice last November in response to allegations of deliberate and
malicious interference on 20 meters.

http://www.arrl.org/news/enforcement...1999/1119.html
GLENDALE, WV: The FCC sent a Warning Notice November 9, 1999, to General
licensee Roger L. Wiseman, KC8JBO, citing evidence that the licensee had
been "deliberately and maliciously interfering with the radio operations
of other licensed amateurs" on 20 meters. "This interference has occurred
at various times in the last several months and includes broadcasting
music and other unidentified transmissions," said a letter from FCC
Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth.
Hollingsworth warned that continued operation of the type described could
result in a fine or license revocation proceeding, and he requested that
the licensee contact him to discuss the allegations.



  #8   Report Post  
Old April 3rd 05, 10:41 PM
Dan
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Lloyd" wrote in message
...

"allegations of deliberate and malicious interference on 20 meters."

Enough said.
Roger loses.




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