Yet nothing publicly available (which doesn't mean the FCC hasn't sent warnings, more often than not, these are not placed into a licensee's personal file unless it reaches enforcement bureau action such as setting aside a license, revocation, etc) on that licensee. I would be wary of posting call signs with accusations, even if the FCC contacted them, if not official action occurred and one can't prove it, then one may be going down a dangerous road liability wise.
Not sticking up for anyone, just saying- the license is valid with no publicly viewable action based upon ULS license public correspondence.
The FCC takes quite a bit to pull a ham ticket. They generally expect amateurs to work it out ourselves.
Applying broadcast standards to personal radio services is stretching it, amateur radio after all is a non-pecuniary service that, while there is some public interest value gleamed from it, is not intended for public consumption as defined by the rules. Reiterating that merely one having a felony should not preclude them from getting any license in either the amateur or personal radio services such as GMRS or even part 90. If the conviction doesn't have anything to do with misusing radio (e.g. piracy, deliberate interference to any licensed radio spectrum user, etc) than it should not be an automatic disqualification. Every license is a privilege and should something egregious occur, than the FCC should act but let's face it, we aren't Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, ComCast or ABC, NBC, Fox or CBS so do they REALLY care?