Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 12, 2026

KHOC

KHOC is a commercial radio station located in Casper, Wyoming.

Last revised
Jun 12, 2026
Read time
≈ 2 min
Length
411 w
Citations
8
Source
KHOC
Broadcast area
Casper, Wyoming
Frequency102.5 MHz
BrandingHeart 102.5
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary
Ownership
OwnerMt. Rushmore Broadcasting, Inc.
KMLD, KVOC, KQLT, KASS
History
First air date
1997 (1997)
Former call signs
KKRR (1997–1998)
Technical information1
Licensing authority
FCC
15925
ClassC
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT517 meters (1,696 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
42°44′37″N 106°18′31″W / 42.74361°N 106.30861°W / 42.74361; -106.30861
Links
Public license information

KHOC (102.5 FM, "Heart 102.5") is a commercial radio station located in Casper, Wyoming.23

All Mt. Rushmore Casper stations are located at 218 N. Wolcott in downtown Casper. The station's transmitter is sited atop Casper Mountain.

History

The station was first known as KKRR, starting on 1997-10-06. On 1998-10-23, the station changed its call sign to the current KHOC.4 Citing technical difficulties, the station, along with its five other sister stations went dark for a period of time in August 2011. KVOC, KMLD, and KHOC remained silent as of December 17, 2011. Other than equipment reasons, no further information as to why the three stations were off the air has been provided.5

Fines

KHOC, along with other Casper stations owned by Mt. Rushmore Broadcasting were fined $68,000 for using unlicensed studio transmitter links, which the company had been using for 16 years. The FCC fined the company $68,000 for "willfully and repeatedly" violating the law, giving the stations' owner 30 days to get licenses for its STLs for KHOC, and sister stations KMLD, KASS, and KQLT.6 In 2012, station owner Jan Charles Gray was named in a lawsuit by the U.S. Depart7 ment of Labor for improperly paying employees. Gray called the claims in the lawsuit "bogus". In 2013, Gray informed the Casper Star Tribune that the lawsuit and a $68,000 fine for unlicensed STLs was "a lot of baloney." Gray said if the FCC doesn't back down, he plans to "sue them on behalf of every radio owner in America that has been wronged by them".6

References

References

External links