That guy is still on ! Same frequency.
If I wanted to be cute, I would say the guy has to get that $10,000 for the fine the best way he knows how.
But on the serious side, this is just a prime example of the ineffectiveness of the FCC's current approach. Obviously, just a $10,000.00 fine is not enough of a deterrent. It might just be a cost of doing business, and a $10,000 fine every couple of years is nothing compared to the cost of buying a station license, if one were available.
The FCC archive files include finding a number of transmitter sites for "Roadblock Radio" a pirate easily heard in both the Newark and Paterson areas for years now. They found transmitters at that guy's house, at his place of business, etc. He was fined $10,000, and Roadblock Radio is still on the air, same frequency in several places, and still promoting the same nightclub in Newark where the FCC found a studio and transmitter.
Operating these stations is a felony in NJ, and that felony includes a penalty of up to 18-months in jail. So the guy in Passaic couldn't be operating that station at 102.3 in Passaic now if he was in a jail cell miles away. If these guys were actually arrested their legal status in this country would automatically be checked and if nothing else they could be deported if they are not here legally.
This latest situation makes it apparent that unless the Federal Marshals get involved and confiscate the equipment, and arrest the pirate on federal charges, or unless the local police get involved and arrest the pirate on state charges, many of these guys aren't going to stop.
I was told by an FCC Field agent that if they can't see an antenna or piece of transmission line they can't knock on the door because they really aren't sure where the station is.
That's when they look at property records and find out who the owner is. If the building owner really knows nothing, they look for and find the transmitter and take it away. Problem solved!
I heard that happened at a high rise apartment house in East Orange, where the transmitter was on the roof and nobody knew who put it there. It probably wasn't the wealthy doctors and lawyers who owned the building in an investment partnership.