In controversial circumstances which would see court actions continuing into the next century, the station lost its licence in February 1996. However, it continued broadcasting through its UK legal licence on satellite; this was deflected by unknown community groups back on to the FM broadcast band. Its satellite licence was removed in 1999 by the
Radio Authority in the UK (who had issued it) due to intervention by the then IRTC in Ireland; it was now also broadcasting on the internet worldwide and this source was now deflected again providing a continuous FM broadcast until the
Comreg clamp-downs on pirate broadcasting in the early 2000s, and had continued rebroadcasting after many raids. During the pirate years, Radio Limerick One continued to operate as it did when it was a licensed station. News bulletins were broadcast hourly with night time reports from UK commercial service IRN. Local obituaries were also read several times a day by the on-air presenter. RLO also had a dedicated sports team and local Gaelic Athletic Association matches were broadcast during season on Sundays using professional outside broadcast equipment where permitted. The station had a full schedule of programming from 7am-1am. In the morning, the breakfast show featured a mix of classic hits, news, weather and travel reports and chat. This was followed in the afternoon with a lean towards Oldies/M.O.R/Country music. Drive-time and evenings featured a 60s/70s/80s music mix over the years. The night time hours of RLO typically featured chat shows, including a "Late and Live" phone in program which features had little or no telephone screening process - meaning almost anyone could get on the air. This led to some controversial incidents over the years and the show was known for its "anything goes" approach. During overnight hours non-stop classic hits were played and in the latter years the "Late and Live" program would be repeated throughout the night. In 2002, it applied for, was refused, and appealed to no effect a licence to operate a
medium wave service in the city of Limerick. The licence was won by a group chaired by Joe Harrington, a former RLO presenter, which never went on air. During its period as a pirate, much use has been made of the
Radio Data System to provide politically loaded messages to users with suitable equipment, ranging from "NO RLO NO VOTE" during a protest at the
2002 Irish General Election to "HELP RLO STOP BCI SLEEZE", a message of such length as to require scrolling. This only provoked more raids and court cases. By late 2005, the station was under the management of Gerry Hannan who also resumed his late night talk show. The studio was moved to his local book shop. After a Comreg raid on 13 December 2006, the station never returned. The engineers and 'community groups' later worked on other projects. Current owner Gerry Hannan announced he intended to go the legal route of IP broadcasting online. This involved broadcasting by web. However, the service was short lived and RLO has remained off air since. ==RLO TV==