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Comcast Cracks Down On People With Free Cable

Speedway Man Fined For Viewing Free Channel

POSTED: 12:25 pm EDT June 11, 2003
UPDATED: 1:33 pm EDT June 11, 2003

An Indianapolis cable company is going after people who are receiving TV channels free of charge.

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Comcast Cable is especially concerned with people viewing premium or pay-per-view channels they haven't paid for, Call 6's Rafael Sanchez reported.

Speedway resident Brian Burton (pictured, left) is involved in a dispute with the company.

Although he's only set up for basic cable, on February 22 he was able to watch the Mike Tyson/Clifford Ettiene boxing match on Showtime.

During the fight, Comcast Cable ran a crawl that included a toll-free telephone number where viewers could call to win a prize.

But instead of a prize, Brian was give a bill demanding $1,000, Sanchez reported.

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If you were accidentally getting a free premium cable channel, would you report it to the cable company?

"I basically I told them it was highway robbery and I wasn't going to pay it," Burton said.

The prize offer was part of a sting to catch people who saw the fight without paying for it.

Secure Signals International -- working on behalf of Comcast -- was behind the sting, and accuses Burton of using a TV decoder to receive the signal.

Brian denies using a decoder. He said he subscribes to HBO -- which he said he can barely see -- and that he's been able to see Showtime for years.

"I didn't request it. It came to my house. I've watched it on occasion, and that's the way I feel about it. I'm not guilty of any crime, especially of trying to steal their signal using illegal equipment," Burton said.

"I've actually invited them to come over to my house -- Comcast and this company which is Secure Signals International to come over to the house and check it out, and they both basically said that they don't do that," Burton added.

Burton could face a fine of $10,000, along with 300 other people caught in the sting in Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, Sanchez reported.

He was offered an out-of-court settlement of $4,000.

"Is $4,000 a large fine that we are imposing on this particular case? Yes it is. We also feel its a crime that effects our cable industry in a big way," Comcast vice president Rusty Robertson said.

Comcast officials said whether people use a decoder or get a premium channel through no fault of their own and don't report it -- it will be considered theft if the homeowner is caught.

"If we penalize our customers for only the price of what they stole, then the risk is not that great to thwart theft," Robertson said.

Burton said he planned to seek legal advice.

Comcast officials said they lose around $6 million a year to thefts of all kinds.

The $10,000 fine for every violation was approved by federal authorities, Sanchez reported.


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