Radar Solutions, Ltd. v. United States Federal Communications Commission , 368 F. App'x 480 ( 2010 )


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  •      Case: 09-50683     Document: 00511032404          Page: 1    Date Filed: 02/22/2010
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    February 22, 2010
    No. 09-50683
    Summary Calendar                    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    RADAR SOLUTIONS, LTD., doing business as Rocky Mountain Radar, Inc.,
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    THE UNITED STATES FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:07-cv-00344-KC
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, CLEMENT, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    The Federal Communications Commission fined Rocky Mountain Radar
    for producing two types of police radar jammers. The Commission alleged that
    the jammers harmfully interfered with authorized radio communications – a
    violation of FCC regulations. Rocky Mountain Radar refused to pay, and the
    dispute found its way to federal court. The district court granted summary
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR .
    R. 47.5.4.
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    judgment to the Commission, requiring Rocky Mountain Radar to remit the
    penalty. Rocky Mountain Radar appeals, and we affirm.
    I.
    A.
    Congress created the Federal Communications Commission to “execute
    and enforce” the Communications Act of 1934.1 The legislature – in the organic
    statute – delegated to the agency the authority to make regulations “governing
    the interference potential of devices which in their operation are capable of
    emitting radio frequency energy by radiation, conduction, or other means in
    sufficient degree to cause harmful interference to radio communications.” 2 The
    agency’s regulatory power would extend over the “manufacture, import, sale,
    offer for sale, or shipment of such devices” and “the use of such devices.”3
    The Commission has exercised its authority to regulate what it calls
    intentional radiators – “device[s] that intentionally generate[ ] and emit[ ] radio
    frequency . . . .” 4 Radio frequency energy is “[e]lectromagnetic energy at any
    frequency in the radio spectrum between 9 kHz and 3,000,000 MHz.” 5 Any seller
    must receive the Commission’s authorization “prior to marketing” an intentional
    1
    
    47 U.S.C. § 151
    .
    2
    47 U.S.C. § 302a(a).
    3
    47 U.S.C. § 302a(a).
    4
    
    47 C.F.R. § 15.3
    (o).
    5
    
    47 C.F.R. § 15.3
    (u).
    2
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    radiator.6 Additionally, no radiator – intentional or otherwise – may cause
    “harmful interference,” 7 which the Commission defines as “[a]ny emission,
    radiation or induction that endangers the functioning of a radio navigation
    service or of other safety services or seriously degrades, obstructs or repeatedly
    interrupts a radiocommunications service operating in accordance with this
    chapter.” 8 As the district court noted, these regulations fulfill Congress’s express
    intent that “[n]o person shall willfully or maliciously interfere with or cause
    interference to any radio communications . . . licensed or authorized by or under
    this chapter . . . .”9
    B.
    The Commission authorizes the police to use radar – a type of radio energy
    – to enforce traffic laws. Police radar can decipher the speed of moving cars by
    interpreting a phenomenon beloved by middle-school science teachers
    everywhere – the Doppler effect. The police radar system sends a radar signal
    toward an approaching car. When the radar hits the car, the car’s movement
    adds an audio signal to the original radar. The combined signal bounces back
    to the police, where the radar machine removes the radar frequency to process
    only the remaining audio frequency – to which the car’s speed is proportional.10
    6
    
    47 C.F.R. § 15.201
    (b).
    7
    
    47 C.F.R. § 15.5
    (b).
    8
    
    47 C.F.R. § 15.3
    (m).
    9
    
    47 U.S.C. § 333
    .
    10
    See R. at 90-91.
    3
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    Rocky Mountain Radar produces radar jammers, which the company
    claims will “scramble” police radar.11 According to a Commission expert, all
    radar jammers “work in the same basic way.” 12 When police radar hits a car
    equipped with a radar jammer, the jammer mixes the incoming signal with an
    audio signal artificially produced by the jammer. The produced audio signal’s
    frequency falls below 9 kHz – and thus outside of the Commission’s regulated
    frequency range. The jammer then reflects back the original radar signal –
    combined not only with the natural audio signal created by all moving objects,
    but also with the artificially created audio signal. According to Rocky Mountain
    Radar, the police system “may become confused at having multiple audio signals
    to process.”13
    C.
    The Commission has long interpreted radar jammers to be unlawful under
    its regulations governing harmful interference. In fact, the agency in 1996
    issued a public notice warning against the use of jammers: “The intentional use
    of jammers is considered ‘malicious interference’ and is strictly prohibited by the
    Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and by Commission Rules.”14
    Rocky Mountain Radar decided not to heed the Commission’s warning. It
    11
    R. at 90.
    12
    R. at 345. Rocky Mountain Radar does not on summary judgment dispute this point.
    See R. at 90 (explaining, at least, that the jammer models in this case work in this same
    general manner).
    13
    R. at 91.
    14
    R. at 114.
    4
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    continued in the late 1990s to produce its Spirit II line of radar jammers. The
    Commission cited the company: the Spirit II acted as an intentional radiator
    designed         harmfully   to   interfere   with   police    radar.     The   company
    administratively challenged the determination; the Commission upheld its
    ruling that the Spirit II violated FCC regulations; and the company appealed the
    Commission’s final determination to the United States Court of Appeals for the
    10th Circuit in a case called Rocky Mountain Radar, Inc. v. Federal
    Communications Commission.15
    The 10th Circuit described that the Spirit II – as expected – “receives a
    radar signal, then blends the signal with white noise, and confuses the computer
    inside the radar gun.” 16 The question on judicial review boiled down to whether
    the Commission could classify radar jammers as intentional radiators – devices
    that intentionally generate and emit radio energy. Rocky Mountain Radar urged
    that the Commission’s conception of the word “generate” made no sense –
    arguing that “the Spirit II is not covered by FCC rules regulating radiators of
    radio frequency energy because the device merely reflects a police radar signal
    and, by itself, cannot produce radio frequency energy.” 17              According to the
    company, reflect does not mean generate.
    The Commission countered that “the fact that the original source of the
    radio frequency energy is external to the device does not place it beyond the
    15
    
    158 F.3d 1118
     (10th Cir. 1998).
    16
    
    Id. at 1120
     (quotation marks omitted).
    17
    
    Id.
    5
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    Commission’s jurisdiction.” 18 Indeed, the jammer “uses the radar signal as a
    source of RF [(radio frequency)] energy, modulates the signal electronically to
    generate a different RF signal, and emits that RF signal to cause interference
    to police radars.” 19 According to the Commission, the company could find no
    solace in the fact that it designed the Spirit II “to function only when it is
    illuminated by a police radar signal.”20
    The 10th Circuit agreed and upheld the Commission’s determination that
    radar jammers operate as harmful intentional radiators, deferring to the
    agency’s interpretation of its own regulations. The court explained, “When an
    agency applies its regulations to complex or changing circumstances . . . this
    calls upon the agency’s unique expertise and policymaking prerogatives and
    courts must presume the power authoritatively to interpret its own regulations
    is a component of the agency’s delegated lawmaking powers.”21 The 10th Circuit
    continued, “The FCC’s decision to give ‘generate’ a more expansive treatment
    than that advocated by [the company] is consistent with the ordinary meaning
    of the term as in ‘create,’ ‘produce,’ or ‘propagate.’” 22 The court opined that “a
    broad reading of the word furthers a stated aim of the Communications Act . .
    . . [and] can also be reconciled with the purpose of the regulations, which is to
    regulate and minimize interference between users of the electromagnetic
    18
    
    Id. at 1121
     (citations, alterations, and quotation marks omitted).
    19
    
    Id.
     (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    20
    
    Id.
    21
    
    Id.
     at 1124 (citing Marin v. Occupational Safety & Health Review Comm’n, 
    499 U.S. 144
    , 151 (1991)) (quotation marks omitted).
    22
    
    Id.
     (citing WEBSTER ’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY ).
    6
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    spectrum.” 23 In the end, the 10th Circuit did not find the Commission’s order
    plainly erroneous or inconsistent with regulation.24
    D.
    The Commission in 2005 learned that the company had produced two new
    lines of radar jammers – the RMR-C450 and RMR-S201.25 The Commission
    asked the company to provide it with information about and samples of the
    devices.         Rocky Mountain Radar complied.          After testing, the Commission
    concluded that both devices – like the Spirit II – functioned as intentional
    radiators designed harmfully to interfere with police radar.
    Regarding the S201: “When the scrambler is hit by a [radar] signal it runs
    it thorough the mixer, adding the FM chirp [audio signal] to mix up the signal
    and using the antenna, reflect back this new signal to the radar gun.” 26 The
    Commission explained: “By definition if an FM chirp generator is mixed with an
    incoming signal and sent to an antenna, then it is . . . an intentional radiator
    subject to Section 15.209.” 27         The agency concluded that the device “is an
    [unlicensed] intentional radiator” and “was designed to intentionally interfere
    with a licensed radio service and is thus in violation of Section 15.5 of our
    23
    
    Id.
    24
    
    Id.
     (citing Thomas Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala, 
    512 U.S. 504
    , 512 (1994)).
    25
    The C450 functions as a dual radar detector and radar jammer, and the S201 has only
    jammer capabilities.
    26
    R. at 463.
    27
    R. at 463.
    7
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    rules.” 28     The Commission found the C450 to work in the same unlawful
    manner.29
    The Commission sent the company a Notice of Apparent Liability
    Forfeiture for $25,000. Rocky Mountain Radar did not respond, so the agency
    issued a Forfeiture Order directing the company to pay the penalty.30
    Instead, Rocky Mountain Radar – oddly enough – sued the Commission in
    federal court. The company alleged that the Commission had, among other
    misdeeds, ignored its request to set aside the forfeiture.                  The Commission
    counterclaimed for the payment of $25,000. The district court concluded that it
    had no jurisdiction over the company’s claims, a ruling that the company does
    not appeal.        The district court did find jurisdiction over the Commission’s
    counterclaim, noting that an agency may bring a forfeiture action through a de
    novo trial in federal district court.31
    All parties agreed that the case came down to whether the C450 and S201
    are “intentional radiators” under the Commission’s regulations. After motions
    28
    R. at 465.
    29
    See R. at 309 & 316.
    30
    See 
    47 U.S.C. § 503
    (b)(1) (stating that any person who has “willfully or repeatedly
    failed to comply with any of the provisions of this chapter or of any rule, regulation, or order
    issued by the Commission under this chapter . . . shall be liable to the United States for a
    forfeiture penalty”); see generally Action for Children’s Television v. Federal Communications
    Commission, 
    59 F.3d 1249
    , 1253-54 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (describing the Commission’s forfeiture
    procedures).
    31
    See 
    47 U.S.C. § 504
    (a) (“The forfeitures provided for in this chapter shall be payable
    into the Treasury of the United States, and shall be recoverable . . . in a civil suit in the name
    of the United States brought in the district where the person or carrier has its principal
    operating office . . . . Provided, That any suit for the recovery of a forfeiture imposed pursuant
    to the provisions of this chapter shall be a trial de novo. . . .”).
    8
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    from both sides, the district court granted the Commission summary judgment.
    The court held that the facts indisputably showed the company’s jammers to fit
    the Commission’s regulatory definition of intentional radiators. Rocky Mountain
    Radar appeals from that final judgment.
    II.
    A.
    We must verify that we have jurisdiction, even though no party challenges
    our ability to hear this appeal.32 Indeed, “every federal appellate court has a
    special obligation to satisfy itself not only of its own jurisdiction, but also that
    of the lower courts in a cause under review, even though the parties are
    prepared to concede it.” 33
    The Communications Act creates a complicated review process.                     One
    federal court has called it a “maze.” 34 Generally, only a court of appeals has
    jurisdiction to hear challenges to the Commission’s orders.35 So a judicial attack
    on the Commission’s regulations (or interpretations thereof) usually has to
    originate in a circuit court. “The district courts, however, have a sliver of the
    32
    Orix Credit Alliance, Inc. v. Wolfe, 
    212 F.3d 891
    , 895 (5th Cir. 2000) (“[W]e have a
    duty to consider objections to our jurisdiction sua sponte.”).
    33
    Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 
    475 U.S. 534
    , 541 (1986) (citation and
    quotation marks omitted).
    34
    Action for Children’s Television v. Federal Communications Commission, 
    827 F. Supp. 4
    , 10 (D.D.C. 1993) (“The maze of jurisdictional rules governing the review of FCC matters is
    difficult to navigate . . . .”).
    35
    See 
    47 U.S.C. § 402
    (a).
    9
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    jurisdictional pie for enforcement of FCC orders imposing a monetary forfeiture
    penalty.” 36 Indeed, 
    47 U.S.C. § 504
    (a) establishes that the Commission may
    bring a de novo forfeiture enforcement action in federal district court.
    But the district court’s jurisdiction may be limited – even in a forfeiture
    action. The district court can hear a factual dispute as to whether a defendant
    has violated the Commission’s rules. But can the district court hear – by way of
    defense – that the Commission’s rules are themselves unlawful?
    Suppose Broadcaster allegedly violates the Commission’s regulation XYZ.
    The Commission issues a forfeiture order, but Broadcaster does not pay. The
    Commission sues in district court to collect. The Commission puts on proof of
    Broadcaster’s actions that violate XYZ. Broadcaster defends that he did not
    commit the alleged actions. So far no apparent jurisdictional problem.
    But suppose, too, that Broadcaster argues in the alternative that XYZ
    violates the Constitution. Broadcaster, in other words, directly challenges the
    validity of the governing agency regulation – a claim usually subjected
    exclusively to appellate review. Does the district court have jurisdiction to hear
    the defense?
    Our sister circuits have split on the issue.37 On the one hand, the 8th
    Circuit has held that “to ask the district court to decide whether the regulations
    are valid violates the statutory requirements.” 38           District courts in the 8th
    36
    Rocky Mountain Radar, 
    158 F.3d at 1121
     (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    37
    See Prayze FM v. Federal Communications Commission, 
    214 F.3d 245
    , 250-51 (2d Cir.
    2000) (citing cases).
    38
    United States v. Any & All Radio Station Transmission Equip., 
    207 F.3d 458
    , 463 (8th
    Cir. 2000).
    10
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    Circuit cannot hear these sorts of challenges even in a de novo forfeiture trial.
    On the other hand, the 6th Circuit allows its district courts to entertain all
    relevant subject matters in a Commission forfeiture proceeding.39 Dicta from
    D.C. Circuit caselaw suggests that it would side with the 6th Circuit.40
    We need not today decide the question. Read properly, Rocky Mountain
    Radar before the district court defended that the Commission had failed to
    establish the necessary facts to prove its jammers to be intentional radiators.
    According to the company, “There exist genuine issues of material fact [that the
    jammers are intentional radiators] to be resolved in a de novo trial as required
    by statute.” 41 The company on appeal assumes the same posture – suggesting
    that summary judgment cannot stand because factual issues remain
    unanswered. The company does not challenge the validity of the regulations.
    The Communications Act expressly authorizes the district court to hear factual
    disputes in de novo forfeiture collection actions, so we can in this case review the
    district court’s final judgment.
    39
    United States v. Any & All Radio Station Transmission Equip., 
    204 F.3d 658
    , 667 (6th
    Cir. 2000) (“Congress presumably could have created a streamlined forfeiture remedy that
    excluded certain defenses by giving claimants the opportunity to raise those defenses in some
    other forum. But it did not do so.”).
    40
    See, e.g., Action for Children’s Television, 
    59 F.3d at 1256
     (“[T]he district court’s
    jurisdiction over the [broadcaster’s] challenge to the constitutionality of the forfeiture statute
    is no threat to the jurisdiction of the court of appeals because review of a Commission order
    imposing a forfeiture (in the defense against a collection suit) would itself be in the district
    court, not in the court of appeals.”); Pleasant Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications
    Commission, 
    564 F.2d 496
    , 501 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (“Thus, absent strong evidence to the contrary
    in the legislative history, or a showing that the special review mechanism is unavailable or
    inadequate, we must assume that the mechanism selected by Congress – a trial de novo in the
    district court – is the exclusive means for review of a forfeiture order entered by the
    Commission.”).
    41
    R. at 437.
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    B.
    We continue to the merits, reviewing de novo the grant of summary
    judgment and applying the same standards as the district court.42 “Summary
    judgment is appropriate where the competent summary judgment evidence
    demonstrates that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving
    party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 43 Both parties agree that the
    main issue centers on whether C450 and S201 are “intentional radiators” under
    the Commission’s regulations.
    The Commission ran three tests on each of the jammers, and Rocky
    Mountain Radar argues that the tests’ results do not provide sufficient evidence
    for summary judgment – and neither do the Commission’s conclusory
    interpretations of those results. One test involved a police radar gun aimed at
    a jammer-equipped car as it drove down the road. According to the company, the
    police radar machine correctly read the car’s speed, so the jammer must not
    interfere with police radar – and cannot be an intentional radiator.
    Ultimately, though, no issues of material fact remain that the jammers fit
    the regulatory definition of intentional radiators – notwithstanding the
    possibility of either the jammers’ inefficacy or the inconclusiveness of any test
    results. Rocky Mountain Radar’s founder and owner admitted – both in an
    expert report 44 and at deposition 45 – that the jammers work by receiving a radar
    42
    Martco Ltd. P’ship v. Wellons, Inc., 
    588 F.3d 864
    , 871 (5th Cir. 2009).
    43
    
    Id.
    44
    R. at 90-91.
    45
    Supp. R. at 1-6.
    12
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    signal, mixing the signal with an audio frequency, and through an antenna
    reflecting the new conglomerate signal back to the police unit.46 Jammers that
    function in this way meet the regulatory definition of an intentional radiator –
    something the company has known since the 10th Circuit twelve years ago
    handed down its decision in Rocky Mountain Radar.47
    III.
    By the company’s own admissions, there is no dispute of material fact that
    Rocky Mountain Radar’s unlicensed police jammers generate and emit radio
    energy.     The company designed its jammers to interfere with police radio
    communications, and – by obstructing law enforcement’s effort to keep our roads
    free from careless drivers – the company endangers the public’s safety. The
    Commission’s regulations expressly forbid all of this. The district court did not
    err in granting summary judgment to the Commission and ordering the company
    46
    The company stresses in its briefs that intentional radiators must emit “radio” energy
    – but that the Commission never measured the frequency of the signal reflected by the
    jammers. According to the company, the Commission thus has failed to establish one of the
    factual predicates for classifying a device as an intentional radiator. A specious argument to
    be sure, because the company admits in its expert report that the reflected signal falls within
    the radio range of the electromagnetic spectrum. See R. at 93 (“The FCC argues that the
    scrambler changes the radio energy it intercepts. This is completely true. Any moving object
    in existence will also change the radio energy reflected back to the radar gun.”).
    47
    We, of course, adopt the 10th Circuit’s reasoning that the “ordinary meaning” of the
    word “generate” includes the type of action performed by radar jammers. See Rocky Mountain
    Radar, 
    158 F.3d at 1124
    . It is of no moment that the police radar is the first source of radio
    energy. Consider this dictionary example: Mountain ranges “generate” more heat than low-
    lying plains. See WEBSTER ’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
    LANG UAG E UNABRIDGED 945 (1961). It is the sun in this example – like the police radar in our
    case – that is the first source of energy, and radar jammers do more work than inert
    mountains to generate energy.
    13
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    to pay the forfeiture.
    AFFIRMED.
    14