You do that all the time Flecc; choosing selected snippets of facts interspersed with anecdotal tales of prosecutions that never concluded with convictions then arguing black is white as if you know more about EAPCs and the law than anybody else.
I do love it when someone joins the e-bike world less than a year ago and then presumes to lecture me! Actually Tom, I possibly do know more about e-bike law than anyone else, since I not only know the UK and EU laws, on this subject I also know the Federal law and all the individual state laws in the USA, the laws in the the non-EU countries of Norway and Switzerland, and these laws in numerous other countries around the world. After all, I was working in the trade on power assisted bicycles in 1950 so have a fairly long grounding in the subject.
I obviously cannot advise you as to why the police chose to use illegal vehicles since only they will know that. I suspect it might be due to ignorance of this complex subject. Alternatively, they may have made the same mistake as much of the e-bike trade in 2003, misinterpreting the 2002/EC/24 EU two and three wheeler type approval law when it was adopted by the UK on 10th November 2003, since when these problems arose.
However, I can point you to arrests and EAPC seizures for destruction under the 1983 EAPC legislation dating from five years later and beyond.
On the morning of Thursday the 4th December 2008 the Metropolitan Police conducted an extensive operation specifically to seize a number of illegal EAPCs, arresting the riders. The EAPCs in question were trikes, pedicabs operating in London, falling victim to the 1983 EAPC legislation when their riders fitted e-bike motors to make their life easier. Some of the motors were 250 watts, legal for e-trikes only under our law, but others were illegally higher powered. However, all were illegal under our EAPC law which specifies a maximum e-trike weight of 60 kilos which the pedicabs could not meet. That made the prosecution very easy, no complex legal arguments about motor power needed. This makes you wrong in your claim that the EAPC regulations are redundant.
It also conveniently makes you wrong about the EU law being in force in the UK. You see, with my comprehensive knowledge of world-wide e-bike regulations, I know that they have no e-trike weight limit. So if the EU regulation had force here, the police could not have carried out that whole operation or subsequent ones, such e-pedicabs being legal in mainland Europe under EU law.
Below is the link to news of that London police operation. The EAPC seizures have continued, over 300 London ones in 2012 alone, reported elsewhere on the web.
London police seize illegal e-trikes
Following this and my preceding reply to KTM
on page 7, hopefully the doubters will at last accept the facts in lieu of their mystical beliefs about e-bike law.
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