This keeps getting filtered on WISPA, not sure why.  However, is the email that 
won't go through.

Rory

From: Rory Conaway
Sent: Saturday, March 05, 2016 7:51 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: FW: [WISPA Members] FCC complaints


Whether we like it or not, it's a good idea to know who the bad apples are.  I 
haven't dealt with this guy in years but Mr. Malone is suffering greatly, 
especially financially.  He has gone through the legal process but there are 
always ways around it as he has learned.  There are those that do not have a 
moral or ethical foundation in their business dealings and they hurt those of 
us who try to run their company by those principles.  Those people need to be 
eliminated through legal means and intense pressure.  Sometimes a lesson needs 
to be taught the hard way.   I have no dog in this fight, I do however, think 
our industry takes a black eye with players like this.  For example, how many 
of us have had our signs stolen from competitors and then replaced in the exact 
same spot?  That's kids play compared to this dude.

Personally, I would go after this guy multiple ways simultaneously.  Go after 
his clients with literally free service if you have to.  Talk to the States 
Attorney General, file with the BBB, file complaints with D&B, knock on the 
door of every house with one of his antennas and steal the customer legally, 
get every ex-customer he has to hit them on Yelp (make sure you can prove he is 
doing it, not hard BTW, just pull the logs, check the MAC of the AP sending the 
disconnect, etc... and probably back it up with data from an analyzer), find 
the location of the transmitted signal and contact the FBI, contact Angies 
List, post his investors names everywhere and what kind of a dirtbag company 
they invested in, have your attorney notify them they could be in violation of 
fiduciary responsibility and can personally be sued if the Managing Member is 
found to be violating the law and they knew it (which they will when you notify 
them), hire his employees away and if you do, get whatever information you can 
assuming they aren't under an NDA, find out who set up the transmitter since I 
know he didn't, send them a cease and desist letter as well as hitting them 
with a restraining order, threaten with restraint of trade, etc...  Attack the 
pillars of the company, the employees (which I'd also go after individually 
either in a criminal or civil manner) and the investors, not the company itself 
since he would be who you are dealing with and and could filter what you do.  
As any lawyer will tell you, you don't have to win a lawsuit, you just have to 
be able to financially battle longer.

These are just a few thoughts off the top of my head, if you need more, let me 
know.

Rory



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