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On Wed, 03 Aug 2005 23:04:45 -0400, Cyrus Afzali wrote:
You're talking about two completely different things. Using information that's sent over public airwaves for any kind of personal gain that includes an illegal activity is obviously illegal. That is what is meant by personal gain. That's only ONE of the actions which constitute "personal gain". There are others. Monitoring the conversations for the sake of your own recreation or information is absolutely, positively NOT illegal. If that were so, it would be illegal to sell scanners in the U.S. and it's absolutely, positively not. Stand by - it may become such. See my penultimate paragraph below. Please note that police transmissions are NOT "broadcasts to the public" but are rather two-way communications. Unless the law has changed drastically since my youth, it is in fact, in the US, illegal to disclose the content of monitored transmissions unless they are intended for public use. Again, you're very, very confused. Disclosing for personal gain is obviously not legal. But it's absolutely false to say that you cannot monitor two-way radio conversations. Police departments themselves have long given the public not only the frequencies they use for communication, but the accompanying "10 code" sheets that explain what the various 10-XX codes are. You are the one who is confused - you are missing the point very widely and giving people bad information. The (Federal) Communications Act (47 U.S.C. s. 605) is very clear on this point - contents of monitored transmissions (except AM/FM/TV broadcast, aviation and marine traffic, and amateur and CB radio communications) MAY NOT BE DIVULGED to anyone except to the sender or recipient without permission of the sender or to another communications carrier or pursuant to a court order. Period. No wiggle room. Do not confuse this with the provisions of the above section which deal with "using for gain" or with the provisions of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (18 U.S.C. s. 2511) which allow the mere monitoring of such communications as long as they are not encrypted for security. In the case of police transmissions being quoted by the press, the former has given the latter such permission. That's the way the law is today. We pros in the field are quietly shuddering at the possibility that it may become a lot stricter in regard to who may monitor non-broadcast, non-marine/aviation, non-amateur/CB radio transmissions in the name of "domestic security" as most foreign countries do, democratic or not. One does not wander around a railyard today with a camera and scanner without prior permission if one is smart... Yes, I am a lawyer and this is the specific area of expertise of my law practice. Further questions? -- === Stand Clear of the Closing Doors, Please === Phil Kane -- Beaverton, Oregon PNW Milepost 754 -- Tillamook District |