Let me try again.
The KHJ call letters had continued to be used on RKO-owned channel 9 after they gave them up on AM 930 concurrent with the sale to Beasley in 1986.
When Disney-Fidelity took over channel 9 they changed the call sign to KCAL-TV. At that point, RKO went out of business, as KHJ-TV was the last of their broadcast properties. RKO, as David points out, was the last holder of the KHJ calls and only they could reclaim them. Further, the calls would have to have been reclaimed by RKO on AM 930 ... which was not possible since the ownership changed simultaneously.
KODJ was (and still is, as KCBS-FM) owned by CBS. KODJ was on FM (and therefore was not AM 930), and not owned by RKO, therefore ineligible on both counts to take the calls KHJ-FM.
The recovery of the KHJ calls by Liberman in 2000 required special FCC action, and it still had to be AM 930 that got them.
In this case, I am "all-knowing" because I had researched the question back in 2000 when the Liberman request was made.
Now wait "All Knowing", what/which 1986 Beasley sale are you speaking about? Also Fidelity/Disney bought KHJ TV in July of 1988, renaming it KCAL 1.5 years later on December 2, 1989. I think you are reinventing history KM and making your "research" up as you go along?
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
Jerry Dunphy Quits KABC to Join KHJ
July 8, 1989 | DIANE HAITHMAN, Times Staff Writer
Jerry Dunphy, anchor of KABC-TV's "Eyewitness News," has turned down a "multimillion-dollar" contract offer to stay at the station and instead will join Disney-owned KHJ/TV Channel 9 as chief anchor of a new three-hour prime-time newscast being developed for debut in January. Dunphy resigned from KABC Friday after a 14-year tenure; his resignation becomes effective Monday. Dunphy will join KHJ before the debut of the 8-11 p.m. news program as chief anchor of an expanded evening newscast.
FCC Approves RKO's Sale of KHJ-TV to Disney
July 21, 1988|PAUL RICHTER | Times Staff Writer
NEW YORK — The Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday approved the sale of RKO General's KHJ-TV Channel 9 in Los Angeles to Walt Disney Co. for $324 million. The decision ends a 23-year broadcast license dispute that the commission called "the most burdensome proceeding in the FCC's history."
The approval will make KHJ Disney's first broadcast station and also clears the way for RKO parent Gencorp to begin the sale of the rest of its broadcast chain, a step that has been blocked for years by a battle over RKO's fitness as a broadcaster. The FCC said that, while questions of RKO's fitness linger, the "approval will put the station in the hands of an indisputably qualified licensee and avoid countless years of continued litigation."
Under the terms of the deal, Disney will pay $218.6 million to RKO and an additional $105.4 million to Fidelity Television, a Southern California investor group organized in 1965 to wrest the non-network station's license from RKO General. The $105.4 million is by far the largest settlement ever received by a license challenger, communications lawyers said.
RKO General's two television station and 12 radio station licenses have come under challenge because of alleged improper political campaign contributions and foreign payments. Last August, FCC Administrative Law Judge Edward Kuhlmann, ruling in one facet of the long-running case, said RKO was unfit to hold a license because of its dishonesty in dealings with the FCC and other questionable actions.