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On Mon, 30 Jun 2003 15:58:08 -0400, thomas wrote:
And the Supreme Court of the US has ruled that in spite of what oral or written advice one gets from a government office, if the law is otherwise, the oral or written advice is of no value and cannot be relied upon. Go read the case of _Richmond v Office of Personnel Management_ where Charlie Richmond relied on a written statement from the Navy Personnel Office about what he could earn and not forfeit his disability retirement payments, but on audit the retirement system found that the Navy office had quoted a wrong figure, and the penalty that poor Charlie had to pay was no pension payments for 6 months as the law specified. This was upheld by the Supremes on the grounds that no government agency official has the power to change what The Congress has enacted. This is not true in the case of the federal tax. I saw it clearly on one IRS pub, that if you filed tax incorrectly based on a response from an IRS agent, you will not be charged the penalty, even if you have to pay the right amount later. AFAIK IRS has been granted the power to waive the penalty in that case. It's their decision, and good public relations, but they didn't have to under the _Richmond_ decision unless The Congress ordered them to do so. Dieter ?? The FCC doesn't have to waive anything it doesn't want. Applying the same principle here, you **may** be right that I may still need to pay a license fee if I get caught. That's locking the barn door after the horse has fled. You have to pay it BEFORE you are caught to avoid the administrative or criminal penalties for unlicensed operation. It doesn't take a graduate degree in rocket science to figure that one out. But I won't be fined $10000, given that I have the print-out of the official FCC email. If you are not in violation, no one will say anything. If you are in violation, a "letter" won't help. We need common sense other than "certificates or professionals" on what is good and bad to do. Common sense says that the world is flat. If you are dealing with law or science, you need to listen to the professionals because they're the ones who come up with, enforce, and interpret the law or the scientific principles. The legal and policy systems are based on common sense eventually. Boy, are you naive! How long have you been dealing with FCC Rules and policy? Or even plain ol' traffic laws? If FCC policy would have been based on common sense there would no longer be a CB, let alone FRS or MURS or non-licensed wireless devices, and there wuld have been adequate enforcement from the very beginning to ensure that that was the case. But no, certain bureaucrats 25+ years ago (and I do know the names and faces) were looking for ways to do less work, and we spectrum users are all paying the penalty and into the forseeable future. Don't get me started. -- 73 de K2ASP / KAE8605 - Phil Kane |
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