
how-to block ads
|
  Thespis I'm not an actor, but I play one on TV. Premium join:2004-08-03 Keller, TX | reply to phattieg Re: Theft of service is bad.....
... at the very least, I'm one of two in a billion. I bet this happens more than you think. I wasn't stealing cable, so I have no problems posting this story. If I had been stealing cable, I might not have posted out of embarrassment. | |   phattieg
join:2001-04-29 Winter Park, FL
·Verizon Wireless B..
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
| reply to Thespis Well, once again, you must be a one in a billion. I ain't picking on you, but you did not have 25 other posters saying "me too" when you posted that story. It doesn't mean it hasn't happend before wither. But as I said, I've never heard of that happening. When cable theft occurs, they come to your house with a camera, and take pictures of the illegal connection, and any possible damage to their equipment too. They file it in their records and flag the address in the billing system as having once stole cable, and it is left alone until you steal it again. If you steal it again, they take more pictures, and usually leave a tag on your door saying they know you're stealing it, it's illegal, and if you do it again, you will be federally prosecuted and could face a $10,000 fine, please call this number to setup service, we'll even waive the install, etc... If you do it after that, both incidents and pictures from both incidents are sent to the state attorneys office, and a lawsuit may also follow. It costs the cable company money to do all of these things to begin with, like gas money, paying the tech to take the photo's, wasting his time with a non-subscriber when he could be helping a customer with a real issue, and in most cases the theif has crappy experience hooking the cable up, so their is signal leaks generated, which degrades your neighbors signal, etc, but they usually try to get you to becme legit first, because they'd rather not spend the money taking you to court. Your situation is a unique one, and it sucks you had to deal with all that, but illegal is illegal. Something folks might not know in this forum is this. If you have a HUD home, and you steal cable, you could lose your house, because theft of utilities in general is against HUD's contract, and if they wanted to be evil (which they don't usually resort to this tactic) they can have your house taken from you. I'm not calling YOU a criminal, but anyone else in here who has stolen cable needs to ask yourself, is reruns, and basic cable worth your house? Hell no. So don't steal it, it's not worth it. You'd be better off pirating DishNetworks Nagravision encryption on a FTA box, but even that has its repercussions. My ex's father sold a bunch of FTA satellite boxs, and now he's facing 12 yars in jail, and $35,000 in fines. But it's your life, so play at your own risk. | |   Thespis I'm not an actor, but I play one on TV. Premium join:2004-08-03 Keller, TX
| reply to phattieg said by phattieg :You are a one in a billion situation though. I myself have never heard of someone getting threatened with legal action as a result of cable theft. I had @home internet but no cable TV. My line was clearly marked with an @home tag. The installer failed to put a filter on my line to block TV. I had Dish at the time and didn't know. I got a letter threatening me with legal action if I didn't pay retroactively for TV from the time my @home service was installed. It took about a month to sort it out; about two weeks of no internet. | |
|