For those who don't get it, this is the reason for the
second amendment.

Ken Potter
w3kmp
NRA Life Member
CRA 1401
ECARS 3779

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Donald Chester
Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 2:31 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AMRadio] Radio Polizania



>From last week's Telecom Digest and DX Listener's
Digest (forwarded to me by
e-mail):


** U S A. House Radio Bill
http://www.mail-archive.com/cypherpunks-moderated%40min
der.net/msg01671.html

Dave Emery (N1PRE)'s outstanding review of the radio
reception provisions in
the Cyber Electronic Security Act passed by the House
on Monday, July 15.

"In effect this removes a safe harbor created during
the negotiations over
the ECPA back in 1985-86 which ensured that first
offenses for hobby radio
listening were only treated as minor crimes - after
this law is passed
SIMPLY INTENTIONALLY TUNING A COMMON SCANNER to the
(non-blocked) cordless
phone frequencies could be prosecuted as a
felony for which one could serve 5 years in jail. ..."

And there's more, including changed provisions related
to the publication of
material heard by radio.

http://www.newsignals.com http://www.spectrumfinder.net
(Benn Kobb, July 17, DX LISTENING DIGEST)

** U S A. [WUN] MAJOR CHANGE TO THE ECPA THAT IMPACTS
EVERYONE...
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 11:46:01 -0400
From: Dave Emery [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Something of enormous importance to radio hobbyists has
just happened in
Washington, and so far I haven't seen any mention or
discussion of it on any
scanner or ham lists I follow.  I hope this message
will alert others to
what has just happened and get people thinking about
the consequences...

The House just passed the Cyber Security Enhancement
Act (HR3482) last night
(7/15/02) by an overwhelming margin of 385-3.  Buried
in an otherwise
draconian bill that raises penalties for computer
hacking that causes death
or serious injury to life in prison and allows
government monitoring of
communications and email without warrants in even more
circumstances is the
following seeming obscure language:

: SEC. 108. PROTECTING PRIVACY.
:
: (a) Section 2511- Section 2511(4) of title 18, United
: States Code, is amended--
:
: (1) by striking paragraph (b); and
:
: (2) by redesignating paragraph (c) as paragraph (b).

For those of you who don't realize what this means ....

USC Section 2511 subsection 4 of title 18 (the ECPA)
currently reads as
foilows....  the CSEA will strike part  (b) of this
language.

Penalties..

:  (a)
:
:   Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this
subsection
:   or in subsection (5), whoever violates subsection
(1)
:   of this section shall be fined under this title or
:   imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
:
:

[The following section will be eliminated by the new
law...]

:  (b)
:
:  If the offense is a first offense under paragraph
(a)
:  of this subsection and is not for a tortious or
illegal
:  purpose or for purposes of direct or indirect
commercial
:  advantage or private commercial gain, and the wire
or
:  electronic communication with respect to which the
:  offense under paragraph (a) is a radio communication
that
:  is not scrambled, encrypted, or transmitted using
:  modulation techniques the essential parameters of
:  which have been withheld from the public with the
:  intention of preserving the privacy of such
communication,
:  then -
:
:  (i)
:
:   if the communication is not the radio portion of a
:   cellular telephone communication, a cordless
telephone
:   communication that is transmitted between the
cordless
:   telephone handset and the base unit, a public land
:   mobile radio service communication or a paging
service
:   communication, and the conduct is not that
described
:   in subsection (5), the offender shall be fined
under
:   this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or
:   both; and
:
:  (ii)
:
:   if the communication is the radio portion of a
:   cellular telephone communication, a cordless
telephone
:   communication that is transmitted between the
cordless
:   telephone handset and the base unit, a public land
:   mobile radio service communication or a paging
service
:   communication, the offender shall be fined under
this
:   title.

What this does is change the penalty for the first
offense of intercepting
an unscrambled and unencrypted radio communication that
is not supposed to
be listened to (e.g. AMPS cellular calls, commercial
pagers, cordless
phones, common carrier communications) for hobby
purposes (eg not a tortuous
or illegal purpose or for direct or indirect commercial
advantage or private
commercial gain) from a
misdemeanour (one year or less prison time) to a
federal FELONY (5 years
prison time).

And further this changes the status of the specific
offense of listening to
a cell call, cordless call, a pager, or a public land
mobile radio service
communication (eg a telephone interconnect) from a
minor offense for which
one can be fined a maximum of $500 to a federal FELONY
for which one can be
imprisoned for up to 5 years.
In effect this removes a safe harbor created during the
negotiations over
the ECPA back in 1985-86 which ensured that first
offenses for hobby radio
listening were only treated as minor crimes - after
this law is passed
simply intentionally tuning a common scanner to the
(non-blocked) cordless
phone frequencies could be prosecuted as a felony for
which one could serve
5 years in jail.

And in case any of my readers have forgotten, a federal
felony conviction
(even without any jail time) deprives one of the right
to vote, to own
firearms, to be employed in a number of high level jobs
and professions, to
hold certain professional licenses and permits, and
important for certain
readers of these lists absolutely eliminates for life
the possibility of
holding any kind of security clearance
whatever (a recent change in the rules) - something
required for many if not
most interesting government and government related
jobs.

So merely being stopped by a cop with the cordless
phone frequencies in your
scanner could conceivably result in life long loss of
important rights and
privileges.

For some of you out there this may seem small potatoes
and irrelevant since
it merely changes the penalties for an already illegal
act (which you are
not supposed to be engaged in) and doesn't make
anything new illegal. But
this is a rather naïve view.

The federal government was certainly not going to
prosecute a hobbyist for
radio communications interception under the old version
of the ECPA if the
worst penalty that could be levied was a $500 fine -
there simply is not the
budget or the staff to prosecute people for what would
be a very minor
offense (equivalent of a speeding ticket). And even
prosecuting hobbyists
for more serious interception (eg not
cellular, cordless or pagers) was still a misdemeanor
offense prosecution
with jail time unlikely.

So in practice the only prosecutions were of people who
clearly had a
commercial or political purpose or otherwise engaged in
egregious and public
(e.g. the Newt Gingrich call) conduct - no hobbyist
ever got prosecuted. And
this was doubtless the intent of Congress back in
1985-86 - it would be
illegal to monitor certain radio traffic but only a
minor offense if you did
so for hobby type personal curiosity or just to hack
with the equipment or
technology - and a serious felony if one engaged in
such conduct for the
purpose of committing a crime or gaining financial or
commercial advantage
(e.g. true spying or electronic eavesdropping).  But
after this bill is
signed into law (and clearly it will be), it will be
quite possible for a
federal prosecution of a hobbyist for illegal radio
listening to be
justified as a serious felony offense worth the time
and effort and money to
try and put the guy in jail even if the offense is not
for a commercial
purpose or part of an illegal scheme. Thus "radio
hacker" prosecutions have
now become possible, and even perhaps probable.

And federal prosecutors and law enforcement agents get
career advancement
and attention from senior management in their agencies
in direct proportion
to the seriousness of the offense they are
investigating and prosecuting -
nobody ever advances to senior agent for going after
jaywalkers, thus by
raising the level of less than legal hobby radio
monitoring offenses from a
jaywalking class offense to a serious felony for which
there can be real
jail time it becomes much more interesting from a
career perspective to
prosecute radio listeners.

And needless to say, such prosecutions would be
shooting fish in a barrel
type things given that many individuals are quite open
on Internet
newsgroups and mailing lists about their activities.

And of course this MAJOR change in the ECPA also has
the effect of making
the rather ambiguous and unclear meaning of "readily
accessible to the
general public" in 18 USC 2510 and 2511 much more
significant, since
intercepting something that isn't readily accessible to
the general public
is now clearly a serious crime even if done for hobby
purposes as a first
offense.   Thus one has to be much more careful about
making sure that the
signal is a legal one...

And further than all of this, and perhaps even MUCH
more significant to
radio hobbyists on Internet scanner lists ....

The careful, thoughtful reader will note that section 4
has been revised a
bit lately, and that this new section 4 (see above) now
makes it a federal
felony with 5 years in jail penalties to violate
section 1 INCLUDING the
following provisions of section 1:18 USC 2511:

: (1)
: Except as otherwise specifically provided in this
: chapter any person who -
:
: (c)
:
:  intentionally discloses, or endeavors to disclose,
to
:  any other person the contents of any wire, oral, or
:  electronic communication, knowing or having reason
to
:  know that the information was obtained through the
:  interception of a wire, oral, or electronic
:  communication in violation of this subsection;
:
: (d)
:
:  intentionally uses, or endeavors to use, the
:  contents of any wire, oral, or electronic
:  communication, knowing or having reason to know that
:  the information was obtained through the
:  interception of a wire, oral, or electronic
:  communication in violation of this subsection; or
:
:  shall be punished as provided in subsection (4) or
:  shall be subject to suit as provided in subsection
(5).

This seems to have changed the status of revealing as
part of a hobby list
any hint of the contents of a radio communications that
might or might not
have been legally intercepted from a potentially minor
misdemeanor offense
or less to a serious felony. Thus if a court finds that
any communication
reported on an Internet list was not legally
intercepted, felony penalties
apply for publishing the information even if the
interception was for hobby
purposes (which of course most scanner list intercepts
are).

Most significant for many of us, the section 18 USC
2510 exceptions to the
prohibitions on intercepting radio communications in 18
USC 2511 are pretty
silent about military communications - not prohibited,
or specifically
allowed except as "governmental communications". So it
is possible that
military comms might be found to be illegal to
intercept and thus passing
around information about them a potential felony, even
though of course the
military has complete access to the world's best COMSEC
technology and uses
for anything sensitive. But in a paranoid age (post
9/11) anything goes...
and if the government wants to go after scanner lists
(like Milcom) it might
now be able to do so with prosecutions with real teeth
and jail time.  Thus
the legal climate has fundamentally changed, and one
can assume that since
the Bush administration has been pushing for the
passage of this bill that
they perhaps intend to start prosecuting at least some
category of radio
hobbyists under the new provisions - no doubt as an
example meant to scare
the rest of us into handing our radios in at the
nearest police station...

So yet another blow to the radio hobbies.... and a big
one indeed...

-- Dave Emery N1PRE,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  DIE Consulting,
Weston, Mass.

_______________________________________________
WUN mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/wun == end ==
(via Tomas NW7US // AAR0JA Hood, swl via DXLD)

This bill is not limited to just cell phone
communications. But to
ANY communication not intended for general public
consumption. So,
that could include listening in to the Coast Guard
rescue
communications, local police and fire, and so on.

I know that listening to any Shortwave Frequency that
some
governmental agency decides is not for general public
use would be
covered by this bill. Making even scanning through
those frequencies a
federal crime. Cell phones are a very limited part of
what this bill
impacts. 73 de (Tomas, NW7US // AAR0JA, ibid.)

Next step, you'll have to register your radio down at
the local Police
department obtaining a permit. And then later you'll
only be able to
buy radios that cover the FM and Mediumwave broadcast
bands, and
'maybe' if you're lucky the International Broadcast
bands. Anyone
owning a vintage general coverage receiver such as a
Hallicrafters,
Hammarlund, Icom etc will be "suspect" and possibly
open to criminal
charges. And, God forbid that you should even think of
owning a ``DC
to Daylight`` receiver. Of course, criminals will
always be able to
"buy them on the street", for the right price. Does
that sound like
any other kind of government control we know of?
(Phil, KO6BB Atchley, ibid.)


Many other countries do limit what radios their
citizens can own and
operate.  With only a handful of amateurs, most
non-democratic
countries do keep their licensed amateurs under some
scrutiny. In
China, unless you are a loyal and ranked 'party member,
having even a
legal amateur station subjects you to frequent
inspections and
monitoring. I've been there and seen it... Many of our
in-country
employees who were amateurs, would come to work to use
our own company
stations for conversations with their friends in other
countries -
afraid of being called on the carpet to (McCarthy era
like) to explain
their actions.

Could the US force you to 'register' your radio and
limit ownership to
only standard broadcast band receivers? Sure. Probably
not in the next
generation or so, but in the 'brave new world' of the
mid 21st
century, who knows... 73 (Frank ----, swl)


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