In a television interview with CNBC Thursday, he said it was "very disappointing" AT&T, Verizon and other members of the Coalition to Save Our GPS are contacting local elected officials to try and block LightSquared from providing a fourth-generation wireless network in rural areas.

On the coalition's website, it claims LightSquared "plans to transmit ground-based radio signals that would be one billion or more times more powerful as received on earth than GPS's low-powered satellite-based signals, potentially causing severe interference impacting millions of GPS receivers—including those used by the federal agencies, state and local governments, first responders, airlines, mariners, civil engineering, construction and surveying, agriculture, and everyday consumers in their cars and on handheld devices."

Falcone, however, believes the coalition is not competing fairly. "They are doing a lot of things behind the scenes. They are trying to stamp out innovation," he said.

The Federal Communications Commission allowed LightSquared to start buying broadband spectrum in 2003, Falcone said. "We were mandated to build this network and now the GPS community is saying, 'They’re interfering with us'...[They] knew of this eight years ago. They knew we were going to build up this network," he said.

Falcone said the other companies "didn’t put the proper filtering on their devices. They are leaking into our highway. We’re not interfering with them They’re interfering with us."