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Don't get me wrong, Glenn, I'm really on your side, but you have some
legal misconceptions. Consider this post as "playing devil's advocate", if you desire. I really am trying to help you. "The FCC has declined to provide a requested hearing, and the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires a hearing and due process of law before they can collect a dime much less the "ORDERED" "fine" of $21,000. Even a traffic ticket gets a hearing, right?" ANSWER: You weren't denied due process because, in your responses to the NAL, you deliberately refused to answer the questions you were asked. Therefore you raised no substantial or material questions of law or fact that required a hearing. A hearing is only required when substantial and material issues of law or fact are raised by the pleadings. [See, for example, Title 47 USC Sec. 309(e), which deals with license applications.] This is also why, for example, a court can grant a demurrer or a motion for summary judgment in a civil case and deny a litigant his right to trial. This is just another way of saying you don't have the right to a hearing in the abstract; there has got to be a reason for holding one. Also, you are going to get a hearing before the U.S. District Court, so you can't claim you are being denied a hearing. "Therefore, the next step for the FCC, by statute, is to now sue K1MAN for the claimed $21,000 in Federal District Court in Bangor, Maine where K1MAN would demand a trial by jury (trial de novo), subpoena witnesses (Hollingsworth, Boston Office Engineers, hams, etc.), file motions, etc. The FCC can't even bring such a suit, of course, because the minimum claim in Federal District Court is $50,000." ANSWER: That's incorrect. First, the monetary jurisdictional minimum has now been raised to $75,000.00, but it only applies to diversity jurisdiction cases. The Forfeiture Order enforcement action will instead be a federal question jurisdiction case, to which the monetary jurisdictional minimum doesn't apply. In addition, wrote: Once they deny his pending application, and they will, things will get very interesting indeed. K1MAN will have no authority to operate and you can bet the FCC will be ready to deal with him if he does. ANSWER: Nope. Title 47 of the USC, Sec. 307(c)(3) says he has the right to continue operating until his appeal from the possible denial of his renewal is finally decided. -Bill Crowell, N6AYJ |
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