At noon on July 14, 1998, Entercom made a move that general manager John Geary admitted should have occurred a year prior and flipped KXOA to
Top 40/CHR as
107.9 The End with new KDND call letters. In January 1999, KXOA's original
Arrow format and branding were recycled by the former KRAK-FM at 93.7 MHz, replacing an ailing classic country station.
"Hold Your Wee for a Wii" contest On January 12, 2007, KDND's morning show, the
Morning Rave, held an on-air contest entitled
Hold Your Wee for a Wii, in which contestants were asked to drink as much
water as they could without
urinating. The contestant able to hold the most water would win a
Wii video game console; having recently come out in November 2006, the
Nintendo console was a very popular and sought-after item but was nearly impossible to find in stores in
North America. According to contest participants, 18 contestants took part in the competition in a room at KDND's studios. The contest began in the morning as contestants were each handed water bottles to drink at 15-minute intervals. Contestants also said that as the contest progressed, they were given increasingly larger quantities of water to drink. According to witness reports, 28-year-old Jennifer Strange, who placed second in the contest, may have drunk nearly .
The Sacramento Bee released audio clips from the morning show indicating that the
disc jockeys were aware of the death of
Matthew Carrington by water intoxication. At one point, a nurse contacted the station and informed the DJs that the contest could be dangerous and potentially fatal. The DJs responded by saying that the contestants had signed releases; according to a contestant, the waivers addressed only publicity issues and made no mention of health or safety concerns. After the contest, Strange spoke to a co-worker by telephone, indicating she was on her way home and in extreme pain, suffering from what appeared to be an intense
headache. The co-worker contacted Strange's mother, who then went to her home to find her dead.
Aftermath On January 15, 2007, KDND management posted a note to the station's website including a note from John Geary, vice president and general manager, expressing sympathies announcing that the
Morning Rave program would be taken off the air indefinitely pending an investigation. The next day, Geary dismissed ten station employees—including the three morning disc jockeys, Lukas Cox, Steve Maney and Patricia "Trish" Sweet—from their positions in connection with the tragedy and cancelled the
Morning Rave. However, Deborah Hoffman of
KXTV reported that former prosecutor Bill Portanova commented that "the radio station has some serious liability exposure", due in part to widespread news coverage of the Matthew Carrington case two years earlier. On January 18, the
Los Angeles Times reported that Sacramento Sheriff John McGinness had ordered homicide detectives to investigate whether a crime had been committed. On April 2, the Sacramento County District Attorney's Office declined to press criminal charges, citing a lack of evidence of criminal misconduct. A wrongful death lawsuit was announced on January 18 on behalf of Strange's husband and three children against Entercom and KDND's operating subsidiary, Entercom Sacramento LLC. The Strange family was represented by prominent Sacramento attorney Roger A. Dreyer of the firm of Dreyer, Babich, Buccola & Callaham, LLP. The Stranges urged the FCC to shut down the station and punish Entercom. On January 24, the FCC announced that it would investigate KDND to see if it violated the terms of its license. In August, two of the KDND DJs, Lukas Cox and Steve Maney, sued Entercom over a wrongful termination of their
contract. Shortly prior to the start of
jury selection in the trial, KDND began to tease that it would be "saying goodbye" on September 8, 2009, leading to speculation that the station was planning to drop
The End in favor of a different format; however, it was later revealed that the campaign was actually for a new commercial-free Tuesdays promotion. Over the next month, the jury at the wrongful death case heard testimony from over 41 witnesses as 192 exhibits were entered into evidence. On October 29, 2009, after a week of deliberations, the jury awarded the survivors of Jennifer Strange the sum of $16,577,118 in monetary damages. Entercom Sacramento LLC was found to be 100% at fault for Strange's death, while Entercom Communications was found to be 0% at fault. The jury also found that Strange was 0% at fault (that is, there was no
contributory negligence) for her own death. The former "Morning Rave" hosts went on other radio jobs in different markets; Cox hosted mornings at
KRBB in
Wichita, Kansas, and, , was working at
KPLD in
St. George, Utah. Maney hosted mornings on
WNKS in
Charlotte, and Sweet hosted mornings on
WPLJ in
New York City under the name Jayde Donovan until the station's sale in 2019; she now hosts a show on
Apple Music 1 and a show syndicated through
Westwood One. The Media Action Center, a watchdog organization founded by former producer Sue Wilson, filed a petition to deny KDND's license when it was up for renewal in 2013. In October 2016, the FCC designated Entercom's license renewal for KDND for hearing, disputing whether the station had operated in the public interest over its previous license term, spanning from 2005 to 2013. The next day, Entercom announced that KDND would cease operations effective February 8 and that its license would be terminated and returned to the FCC. Entercom stated that "it is in the company's best interests to voluntarily turn in the KDND license to facilitate the timely FCC approvals for the planned combination with CBS Radio". KDND's format and
The End branding were re-located to sister station
KUDL at 9:00 a.m. on February 6 (the last song before the move was "
Scars to Your Beautiful" by
Alessia Cara). 107.9 then began
stunting with a jockless playlist of
pop music occasionally interrupted by static-backed liners redirecting listeners to KUDL and advising remaining listeners of the impending shutoff of the signal; this would later transition to a loop of "
Bye Bye Bye" by
N'Sync and "End" staffers redirecting listeners to KUDL. As the station's final program, a farewell special aired at 11:30 p.m. on the 7th, hosted by former afternoon DJ Chris K, playing music from the End's 18-year history. This special also culminated with "Bye Bye Bye" by N'Sync. Before the song was finished, KDND's
transmitter was shut down on February 8 at 12:01 a.m., bringing a close to the nearly 70-year history of the station. Entercom also paid the Media Action Center $35,000 for
attorney fees involved in their petition to deny renewal; in return, the Media Action Center would not challenge other Entercom licenses or the CBS Radio acquisition. On September 7, 2017, the FCC deleted the license for KDND after denying a Petition for Reconsideration and Application for Review filed by Ed Stolz, the former owner of the station at 106.5 MHz when it was KWOD; Stolz had sought to have his 1996 sale of the station rescinded so he could resume control. The FCC ruled that Stolz's arguments had no merit and that he was not a party of interest in the dispute between Media Action Center and Entercom that led to the license revocation hearing. == Reuse of the frequency in Sacramento ==