Amazon halts sales of illegal high-speed ebikes in California after fatal crashes
Briefly

Amazon halts sales of illegal high-speed ebikes in California after fatal crashes
"Vehicles with two wheels that can exceed 28mph using pedal assistance or can exceed 20mph with throttle assistance are considered mopeds or motorcycles rather than ebikes, the alert stated. The alert warned that retailers were marketing two-wheeled vehicles as electric bicycles when they did not qualify as such. Mopeds and motorcycles have age limits and require special licensing. Sometimes, what looks like an ebike or is marketed as an ebike is not a bike at all."
"Amazon said the retailer is working to remove listings for ebikes or e-motorcycles that do not comply with California regulations. KCRA 3 reported finding vehicles listed as ebikes that could exceed 40mph(65km/h). The outlet said that after contacting Amazon, the company removed the listings and said it would require third-party companies selling ebikes to follow state laws and company policy."
"In April an 81-year-old man in Orange county died after a teenager illegally riding an e-motorcycle struck him. The teen's mother, Tommi Jo Mejer, has since been charged with involuntary manslaughter in Ed Ashman's death as officials say she was warned it was illegal for her son to operate the vehicle."
"We are seeing a surge of safety incidents on our sidewalks, parks and streets, Bonta said. Todd Spitzer, the Orange county district attorney who charged Mejer, praised the development and noted in a statement that last week a 13-year-old boy died after crashing an e-motorcycle he was riding. More than 100 deaths across the United States have resulted from ebike and E-motorcycle crashes and injuries have increased 430% in the last four years in southern Califo"
Amazon plans to stop selling certain high-speed electric bicycles in California and remove listings that do not comply with state regulations. A consumer alert from the state attorney general and county district attorneys warned that two-wheeled vehicles exceeding 28 mph with pedal assistance or exceeding 20 mph with throttle assistance are classified as mopeds or motorcycles, not electric bicycles. The alert warned that retailers were marketing vehicles as ebikes when they did not qualify, and that mopeds and motorcycles have age limits and require special licensing. Incidents include an Orange County death after a teenager illegally rode an e-motorcycle, leading to involuntary manslaughter charges. Amazon said it removed listings that could exceed 40 mph and required third-party sellers to follow state laws and company policy.
Read at www.theguardian.com
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]