She Called My Router Illegal. Then the Auditor Opened Her File-Ginny

“Your Wi-Fi is illegal.”

That was what Gretchen Albbright said while standing on my porch with two sheriff’s deputies behind her.

I remember the smell of that evening first.

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Wet leaves in the gutters, cold dirt under the shrubs, and the faint woodsmoke drifting from somebody’s fireplace three streets over.

Under my feet, in the basement, my server rack gave off its usual quiet hum.

Blue lights blinked on the managed switch.

The whole thing sounded like a refrigerator doing its job.

Nothing about it sounded criminal.

I had not hosted a loud party.

I had not built an illegal antenna.

I had not bothered a single neighbor.

I had installed a home network.

That was all.

The equipment was a Ubiquiti UniFi setup, the same kind of prosumer gear used in small offices, churches, schools, coffee shops, and plenty of homes owned by people who like stable Wi-Fi.

It was certified, labeled, ordinary, and legal.

But ordinary facts did not carry much weight in Ridgerest Pines once Gretchen decided they were inconvenient.

Ridgerest Pines was a planned community in central Ohio, built in the mid-2000s with the kind of ambition developers put into brochures.

The entrance had stone pillars.

The pond was called an amenity lake, though everyone knew it was mostly goose waste and rainwater runoff.

The lawns were trimmed within a quarter inch of their lives.

The mailboxes were regulated colonial white.

The welcome packet explained how long garbage cans could remain visible from the street after pickup.

Two hours.

Exactly two hours.

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