FCC PROPOSES SEX FOR SAM FINE
This bit of news has officially made it all over the world in a very short period of time. We'll post as many links as we can, but honestly, there's an awful lot of them, so we may not hit them all.
From the Associated Press:
WASHINGTON -- The government on Thursday proposed the second-biggest fine ever for indecency: $357,000 against Infinity Broadcasting for a radio segment in which a couple was said to be having sex in New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral.
The Federal Communications Commission responded to an outpouring of complaints following an August 2002 broadcast of the "Opie and Anthony" show over New York's WNEW-FM and 12 other Infinity radio stations. The nationally syndicated show was canceled a week later and DJs Greg "Opie" Hughes and Anthony Cumia were fired.
Four commissioners voted for the fine. The fifth said the agency should have gone after Infinity's licenses instead.
"Infinity's actions here were unquestionably willful and egregious," Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein said. "These callous actions show a high degree of culpability and a deliberate attempt to heighten the shock to listeners. They clearly offended community standards."
The fifth commissioner, Michael Copps, dissented.
"Infinity/Viacom could pay this entire fine by tacking just one more commercial onto one of its prime-time TV shows and probably pocket a profit to boot," Copps said. "Unless the FCC takes these cases seriously and initiates revocation hearings, stations will know that they don't have to take the law seriously."
Infinity has 30 days to pay the fine or appeal. It would be the second-largest fine ever for indecency, trailing only the $1.7 million Infinity paid in 1995 to settle several cases against Howard Stern.
"We've been offered an opportunity to respond and we intend to do that," Infinity spokeswoman Karen Mateo said.
The commission also proposed fining AMFM Radio Licenses, now part of Clear Channel Radio, $55,000 for two broadcasts on WWDC-FM in Washington in which the "Elliott in the Morning" program interviewed female students about sexual activities at their high school, including references to oral sex. Copps again dissented, saying the commission should try to revoke the station's license rather than impose a fine.
A call to Clear Channel was not immediately returned.
Adelstein said that in the future, each program segment found to be indecent should be considered a separate violation subject to a $27,500 fine. In the current cases, the FCC proposed to fine each station once for each whole program broadcast.
The radio producer who was on the scene at St. Patrick's Cathedral, Paul Mercurio, later pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and was ordered to perform seven days of community service. The man and woman who allegedly had sex in the landmark church were also charged. Before he was to appear in court last month, Brian Florence, 38, died at his home in Alexandria, Va. His girlfriend, Loretta Lynn Harper, 36, was expected to plead guilty to a minor charge and avoid jail time, their lawyer, Maranda Fritz, said.
From the UK's Guardian
...and one from Minnesota...
..and one from North Dakota
...and one from Indiana...
...and one from South Dakota...
(Notice how these are all cities the guys WEREN'T syndicated to? Nice.)
Arizona checking in...
USA Today
CNN linkage
...and Reuters has it too