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Golden Gate Communications will stop spending good money after bad in Allios $1.25 million lawsuit

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Last December, California-based Golden Gate Communications, LLC sued Allios, Inc. for $1.25 million for 403 invoices that were never paid for products purchased from the telecom distributor to construct AT&T’s and other industry projects. Last Thursday, the Santa Barbara company filed a motion with the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas to dismiss the complaint without prejudice …

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Liberal, Kansas most likely wasn’t up to par if they had to defend AT&T’s golf course siting lawsuit

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

In a court filing today, all claims and defenses between AT&T and the City of Liberal, Kansas, are dismissed without prejudice, according to a joint application filed with the District Court for the District of Kansas in Wichita. In addition, the parties agreed that each party would bear its own attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses. In its November 23, 2023 …

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Texas court will likely give AT&T a hollow victory in its $1.44M lawsuit against former golden child Goodman

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Contractors and suppliers that have had to sue clients, such as Nexius, for past due payments know that it’s an expensive legal and often fruitless process that can take a year or two since attorneys aren’t adverse to the defendant’s counsel delaying the process as long as possible as they pile up billable hours. So when AT&T’s attorneys filed a lawsuit …

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Pirate radio broadcaster never paid a $20K fine in 2015, so why does the FCC think they’ll get $2.3 million for a second offense?

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The FCC yesterday announced its first proposed fines under the Preventing Illegal Radio Abuse Through Enforcement Act (PIRATE Act) against three pirate radio operators. The agency issued the maximum penalty allowable, $2,316,034, against César Ayora and Luis Angel Ayora for pirate radio broadcasting in Queens, New York. However, the Commission most likely realizes that the fine is more of a …

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Nexius crashes and burns its dedicated construction supply chain, stiffing them for millions of dollars

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Selected by AT&T in 2016  as one of their eight suppliers of the year out of more than 5,000 companies, well-established Frisco, Texas-based network deployment firm Nexius cemented a relationship with the carrier that would see them become one of their leading suppliers and turfing contractors. Wireless infrastructure manufacturers, distributors, and contractors were eager to accept Nexius’s business and provide …

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Proposed non-compete ban will affect every company in America; many believe it’s a blessing

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking which would ban non-compete agreements in all employment contracts, except where related to the sale of a business. This exception would only be available where the party restricted by the non-compete clause is an owner, member, or partner holding at least a 25% ownership interest in a business entity. …

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In the not so friendly terrestrial skies, Inmarsat files a lawsuit against Ligado for refusing to pay

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

In April 2020, FCC Commissioners unanimously approved Ligado’s application to deploy a low-power terrestrial nationwide network in the L-band to support 5G services, ignoring opposition to the departments of Interior, Commerce, Justice Energy, and Homeland Security opposing the company’s plan, claiming that Ligado could disrupt GPS service to aviation and military customers. Ligado, which emerged following the bankruptcy of LightSquared, had …

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AT&T’s sole bid is inked for a New Jersey lease deal; lawsuit argues monopine violates town’s height restriction

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

A Scotch Plains, NJ homeowner has filed a lawsuit in Superior Court to block the Town of Westfield’s plan to lease space to AT&T for the construction of a cell tower at the Conservation Center – an adjacent recycling compound. David Munsky, whose home borders Westfield and the recycling facility’s property, claims the monopine will “tower over” his and other …

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Financially strapped landlord sues American Tower in a hail Mary attempt to shore up lost rents and profits

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

A Baltimore City, Maryland building owner is suing American Tower’s Global Tower Holdings for allegedly not maintaining a cell site on the property’s rooftop and causing damages above $75,000. Olcan lll Properties, LLC states in their complaint that they had provided an easement since January 1, 2021, to Global Tower on the property located at 4437 Belair Road for “a …

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AT&T sues Liberal, Kansas after it nixes a second siting application that appeared to be a hole in one

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The former Vice Mayor of Liberal, Kansas, allegedly informed AT&T’s siting representative that the City would support an ordinance allowing a special use permit for a 150-foot monopole on the property of the Liberal Country Club after the City denied a prior church location in 2021 due to resident opposition. However, the City Commissioners denied their request, and AT&T sued …

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Crown Castle sues Black Electric for bridge fiber break they claim cost $403K to repair

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Houston, Texas-based Crown Castle Fiber LLC is suing Black Electric, Inc. of McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, claiming that the company damaged a fiber network owned by Crown Castle that spanned the Hatem Memorial bridge that carries U.S. Route 40 over the Susquehanna River between Havre de Grace and Perryville, Maryland. In its complaint, Crown Castle said on October 1, 2019, Black …

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Lawsuit hastens NJ borough’s approval of Verizon’s 20 sites on Belmar’s beachfront property

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The Borough of Belmar, NJ has agreed to let Verizon Wireless erect 20 small wireless sites along its boardwalk after the carrier filed a lawsuit last year accusing the borough of delaying approval for the proposal. According to a consent judgment filed in federal court, Belmar and Verizon struck a deal that will enable the telecom company to install 20 …

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AT&T sues T-Mobile over false senior discount ad campaign that could impact sales

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

When carriers are concerned that their competitors have misleading ads, the normal way to resolve it is to file a complaint with the National Advertising Review Board. However, AT&T is suing T-Mobile in Texas’s Eastern District Court, accusing the Uncarrier of uncaring about accuracy and publishing false advertising. They’re demanding that they are awarded T-Mobile’s profits earned through its advertising …

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Indiana court nixes Norfolk Southern’s claim that it was due profit sharing revenues from towerco

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

An Indiana court found that Global Tower LLC did not owe Norfolk Southern Railway Co. a percentage of its revenue from a tower on land owned by the railroad in Peru, Indiana. United States District Judge Robert Miller, Jr. granted Global’s summary judgment motion Tuesday, finding that the tower operator never agreed to take on the previous deal between Norfolk …

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After dozens of FCC staffers provide the goods for a $116 million fine, robocaller will likely not pay a dime

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Thomas Dorsher, the CEO of Fargo, ND DigiGames, a manufacturer and software developer of TV games for professionals and event planners that oftentimes used phones to play live trivia games at events, was most likely concerned about scathing reviews from Trustpilot and Yelp that castigated his products and services. However, he didn’t appear to be troubled about possible FCC action …

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D.C. Circuit will not reverse FCC’s ruling that Dish controlled AWS-3 spectrum bidders

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has ruled in favor of the FCC that two companies aligned with Dish Network were ineligible to receive $3.3 billion in bidding credits available to small businesses in the 2014 AWS-3 spectrum auction. Northstar Wireless and SNR Wireless were established by Dish as designated entities (DEs) which entitled them to $3.4 …

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Dish must again face lawsuit that it used two sham companies to save billions of dollars in spectrum buys

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Dish Network Corp. will be required to face a whistleblower’s False Claims Act (FCA) spectrum license lawsuit for the second time following a Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruling yesterday. The carrier is alleged to have used sham small businesses to win FCC licenses worth billions of dollars. A three-judge panel agreed that Vermont National Telephone Co. showed …

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Board of Health issues Verizon a cease-and-desist order for ‘unfit’ tower but now needs $84k to defend it

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

Tomorrow, Pittsfield, Massachusetts Board of Health (BoH) officials will ask the City Council to back up their cease-and-desist order against Verizon Wireless to discontinue their use of a cell tower at 877 South Street, requesting $84,000 in legal fees for two outside attorneys, although some members believe their attempt will be futile. The BoH issued an emergency order on April …

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FCC ensnares Putin ally Abramovich in Truphone’s $660,639 fine for not disclosing his investments

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

The FCC has proposed a fine of $660,639 for London-based Truphone, the owner of iSmart Mobile, for exceeding the statutory limits of 25% for ownership by foreign individuals or entities tied to FCC licenses without FCC approval. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said the Commission in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “launched an internal assessment of Russian ownership of …

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Lawsuit by deceased climber’s parents says tower wasn’t secured, but photos argue against the complaint

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

After a 21-year-old Sevier County, TN man fell to his death last May after climbing a tower atop Bluff Mountain, his parents have filed a lawsuit against the county, saying it didn’t do enough to keep people away from climbing the self-supporting tower. Allen J. Morton III fell from a tower on Green Top Road on May 26, 2021. The …