Things like this, that is, a station like KOFY rising from the dead with no apparent authorization, just don't make sense at all. Also consider the fact that the FCC doesn't treat situations like this in the same way. For instance, I noticed that an application for a new AM station in Bay City, Texas was denied because the applicant's letter requesting reconsideration was received one week late. He claimed he wasn't notified by letter and that's why he didn't make the deadline for a reply; the FCC said that the public notice which described the denial was sufficient. The Bay City application would have allowed the 1270 frequency to be re-activated with the same sort of facilities as the original occupant, KIOX, with 1000 watts day and night.
In the case of KOFY, they are ID'ing it, but the call letters don't exist.They were deleted by the FCC when the license was canceled. The station therefore is officially referred to as "DKOFY" in all of the FCC information. Being on the air at all is illegal, of course, and leaving the carrier on at night is an invitation for a formal complaint from co-channel WLNO New Orleans. Meanwhile, down on 690, KZEY hasn't been on the air in about four years and has no studio and no towers, yet it's still listed by the FCC as "licensed." Like DKOFY, it doesn't appear on the official "silent stations" list.
It doesn't really matter to me whether or not the station in Bay City actually got on the air, but it really bothers when regulations aren't applied evenly and someone like Jerry Russell can do as he pleases with his stations, FCC rules be damned.