Fifteen years ago I worked for a frugal (that's being kind) owner doing on air and production. The prior engineer had placed the STL transmitter and processing under a desk. During a Saturday shift I walked into the control room and heard oldies instead of classic country on a noisy signal. I called the transmitter and the remote control indicated 100 percent power. Other radios had the same thing, oldies on our frequency. The signal ID was from a station in an adjoining market about thirty-five miles away. I called the contract engineer and general manager and they were stumped as I was.
After about an hour of going crazy trying to figure out what the hell was going on, the GM fixed the problem. It turns out I had kicked the power button on the STL transmitter located under the desk and shut down the unit. The STL receive antenna was high enough in elevation and aimed in the same direction as the distance signal and our studio. Their STL was licensed, our wasn't. The previous engineer was given an STL by the frugal owner and neither bothered with paperwork, they just put it on the air.
Soon after the processing and STL were placed in the rack so that would never happen again. I think they eventually licensed the STL.