School board members in Pasco County approved Liptak's five-day, unpaid
suspension on Tuesday. Liptak didn't contest the decision.
Officials say Liptak activated the jammer in his Fivay High School
classroom from March 31 until April 2.
He later told a school district investigator he never intended to cause
problems.
He said he thought the jammers were allowed as long as they weren't intended for malicious purposes. The district says Verizon chose not to prosecute him. Superintendent Kurt Browning wrote in a reprimand letter that Liptak had potentially violated federal law and that the signal jamming could have potentially interfered with others trying to call 911 during an emergency.
"Verizon had come to the school saying someone had a jamming device,
because the cell phone service was being interrupted in the area," Pasco
County School District spokesperson Linda Cobbe said.
Cobbe says Liptak's jamming device blocked communication to the cell
tower on the school campus.
He said he thought the jammers were allowed as long as they weren't intended for malicious purposes. The district says Verizon chose not to prosecute him. Superintendent Kurt Browning wrote in a reprimand letter that Liptak had potentially violated federal law and that the signal jamming could have potentially interfered with others trying to call 911 during an emergency.
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