PS. This was the only video I could find, if you know of a better one, please post the link here. Thanks.
according to the Mail, he's bailed until next year.It says in that video that he was cleared of manslaughter and not charged with dangerous driving. Instead, he was charged with furious cycling, which means he was dealt with as a cyclist, not a motor vehicle. I guess that the court decided that his bike complied with pedelec law.
All 3 charges suggest that the bike had been dongled, none of those charges could apply with an ebike with a motor assist cutoff of 15.5mph.Hanlon is charged with one count of causing death by careless driving, one of causing death while uninsured and one of causing death while unlicensed
looks like it has a rear hub motor so no dongle needed as you can change the settings in the display also known as a of road switch.All 3 charges suggest that the bike had been dongled, none of those charges could apply with an ebike with a motor assist cutoff of 15.5mph.
It's a Specialized ebike and I thought they used crank driven motors. It could be as converted Specialized pushbike of course.looks like it has a rear hub motor so no dongle needed as you can change the settings in the display also known as a of road switch.
Looking at that video, which is all that a court can do, the cyclist was well out into the road and the woman had to run to throw herself under him. Makes me wonder if someone threw himself of a motorway bridge onto my car if I would be blamed.CCTV of Dalston hit-and-run bike crash shows moment woman crossing road gets struck by cyclist on electric bicycle
Fighting for her lifewww.thesun.co.uk
I though (others may well be able to correct me here) that if it is switchable to an illegal mode it is remains illegal whatever setting it is on at the time.looks like it has a rear hub motor so no dongle needed as you can change the settings in the display also known as a of road switch.
The court can also study the bicycle to see if it was legal or illegal.Looking at that video, which is all that a court can do, the cyclist was well out into the road and the woman had to run to throw herself under him. Makes me wonder if someone threw himself of a motorway bridge onto my car if I would be blamed.
He's being charged on 3 counts: causing death by careless driving, causing death while uninsured and causing death while unlicensed. None of those charges could be brought if the bike was legal.A legal bike can't be convicted of speeding but a charge of wanton or furious riding can be used.
If you were found to be driving uninsured and or unlicenced then its likely you'll be prosecuted for that.Makes me wonder if someone threw himself of a motorway bridge onto my car if I would be blamed.
There are two separate kinds of offences involved. Riding uninsured etc applies if the bike was illegal, and would apply even if he was riding it perfectly (though he might not get caught in that case). He can't be held for those however fast/badly he was riding if the bike was legal; and the lights are irrelevant as you say.It seems pretty irrelevant if the lights were red or green if he was riding an illegal bike it is his fault due to the fact he should not be on the road.
He can say that he was dazed and didn't know what he was doing.. The court would have to decide if that's a valid excuse. Some people get away with murder with worse excuses than that. What about the USA policewoman that went into the flat above and shot the guy in there, saying she thought he was an intruder. I wonder if his loud music and stomping around on her ceiling had anything to do with it.It is still a hit and run and that makes him appear pretty guilty before anything else is even established.