• OC mother charged after teen son critically injures 81-year-old in e-motorcycle crash

    From B. Clark@no@mercy.org to alt.politics.republicans, oc.general, rec.bicycles.tech, sac.politics, talk.politics.guns on Sat Apr 25 10:06:31 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.bicycles.tech

    LAKE FOREST, Calif. (KABC) -- An Orange County mother is facing felony
    charges after prosecutors say her teenage son critically injured an
    81-year-old man by crashing into him while riding an electric motorcycle

    The crash happened last week, and the victim remains hospitalized in
    critical condition. Prosecutors say the woman was warned about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle before the crash.

    As Ed Ashman fights for his life in the hospital after being struck by a 14-year-old boy illegally riding an e-motorcycle in Lake Forest, the
    teen's mother is facing the consequences.

    "She's looking at over six years in state prison," Orange County
    District Attorney Todd Spitzer told Eyewitness News.

    Spitzer says his office has charged 50-year-old Tommi Jo Mejer with one
    felony count of child endangerment, one felony count of accessory after
    the fact to a crime, one misdemeanor count of contributing to the
    delinquency of a minor, one misdemeanor count of loaning a motor vehicle
    to an unlicensed driver and one misdemeanor count of providing false information to a peace officer. She was arrested on Tuesday.

    "I am going to prosecute parents to the fullest extent of the law,"
    Spitzer said. "As parents, whether you like it or not, we're responsible
    for the conduct of our children."

    Last week, investigators say Mejer's son was riding a Surron
    e-motorcycle, "doing wheelies" outside of El Toro High School, when he
    crashed into Ashman -- a Vietnam War veteran and beloved substitute
    teacher who was walking home from work. He is now hospitalized in
    critical condition.

    "We are praying that this substitute school teacher will have a full
    recovery, and that the charges don't change at all," Spitzer said.

    The law says e-bikes manufactured to stay under 20 mph have no age or
    licensing restrictions, but those that have been modified or can reach
    higher speeds are considered e-motorcycles and require a motorcycle
    license, insurance and registration.

    "It could go up to 60 mph with that particular model, and it could go
    from like 35 mph in two to three seconds," Spitzer said.

    Investigators say Mejer was warned by sheriff's deputies about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle in June of last year.

    Mejer reportedly called the sheriff's department, complaining that a
    neighbor was posting pictures of her son riding an e-motorcycle, saying
    he was out of control.

    The sheriff's department says it spent nearly 30 minutes explaining to
    her that her son could not legally ride the e-motorcycle, and that she
    would face criminal charges if she continued to let him.

    "We have her on body-worn camera talking about and understanding the
    dangers and the illegality of this particular vehicle," Spitzer said.

    Eyewitness News tried speaking with Mejer at her Aliso Viejo home after
    she posted bond, but no one answered the door.

    Spitzer hopes her case sends a message to parents and prosecutors.

    "Either they're going to hate me for doing this, saying, 'Why the heck
    would you go after a parent when this is just their kids' activity?' Or
    they're gonna say, 'We better really research and thoroughly understand
    the kinds of motor vehicles we're providing to our kids,'" Spitzer said.
    "A lot of times prosecutors have to bring these kinds of test cases, if
    you will, to make sure other prosecutors throughout the country
    understand that this is the direction we need to go."

    The district attorney cannot comment on any potential juvenile charges
    the teen involved in the crash is facing.

    Mejer marks the third parent in Orange County this year alone charged
    with illegally allowing their child to ride an e-motorcycle.

    A GoFundMe has been set up to help support Ashman during his recovery.

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-ed-ashman-veteran-teacher-fighter

    Spitzer issued the following statement in a press release:

    "Parents who buy their child an E-motorcycle and let them ride them
    illegally or help modify e-Bikes to transform them into E-motorcycles
    are handing their children a loaded weapon - and those parents are going
    to be prosecuted. That is not a threat. That is a promise. This
    81-year-old man survived flying combat missions in Vietnam protecting
    freedom and now he is clinging to life because a mother refused to
    parent her child and he was run over in the street by a vehicle that
    should have never been on the road. There is absolutely no reason that
    an unlicensed, untrained child with no concept of the rules of the road
    should be riding a motorcycle that can go up to nearly 60 miles per hour
    next to cars on a public street and think that by some miracle they are
    going to be safe. The state Legislature has made it virtually impossible
    for prosecutors to hold juveniles accountable for committing serious
    crimes, and the only way to stop the carnage E-Bikes and E-motorcycles
    are causing across Orange County is to hold parents accountable for the
    crimes they allow their children to commit."

    https://abc7.com/post/aliso-viejo-mother-charged-teen-son-crashes-81-year -old-man-riding-motorcycle-leaving-critically-injured/18942740/

    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From =?UTF-8?B?Y3ljbGludG9t?=@cyclintom@yahoo.com to rec.bicycles.tech on Sat Apr 25 19:19:35 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.bicycles.tech

    On Sat Apr 25 10:06:31 2026 "B. Clark" wrote:
    LAKE FOREST, Calif. (KABC) -- An Orange County mother is facing felony charges after prosecutors say her teenage son critically injured an 81-year-old man by crashing into him while riding an electric motorcycle

    The crash happened last week, and the victim remains hospitalized in
    critical condition. Prosecutors say the woman was warned about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle before the crash.

    As Ed Ashman fights for his life in the hospital after being struck by a 14-year-old boy illegally riding an e-motorcycle in Lake Forest, the
    teen's mother is facing the consequences.

    "She's looking at over six years in state prison," Orange County
    District Attorney Todd Spitzer told Eyewitness News.

    Spitzer says his office has charged 50-year-old Tommi Jo Mejer with one felony count of child endangerment, one felony count of accessory after
    the fact to a crime, one misdemeanor count of contributing to the
    delinquency of a minor, one misdemeanor count of loaning a motor vehicle
    to an unlicensed driver and one misdemeanor count of providing false information to a peace officer. She was arrested on Tuesday.

    "I am going to prosecute parents to the fullest extent of the law,"
    Spitzer said. "As parents, whether you like it or not, we're responsible
    for the conduct of our children."

    Last week, investigators say Mejer's son was riding a Surron
    e-motorcycle, "doing wheelies" outside of El Toro High School, when he crashed into Ashman -- a Vietnam War veteran and beloved substitute
    teacher who was walking home from work. He is now hospitalized in
    critical condition.

    "We are praying that this substitute school teacher will have a full recovery, and that the charges don't change at all," Spitzer said.

    The law says e-bikes manufactured to stay under 20 mph have no age or licensing restrictions, but those that have been modified or can reach
    higher speeds are considered e-motorcycles and require a motorcycle
    license, insurance and registration.

    "It could go up to 60 mph with that particular model, and it could go
    from like 35 mph in two to three seconds," Spitzer said.

    Investigators say Mejer was warned by sheriff's deputies about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle in June of last year.

    Mejer reportedly called the sheriff's department, complaining that a
    neighbor was posting pictures of her son riding an e-motorcycle, saying
    he was out of control.

    The sheriff's department says it spent nearly 30 minutes explaining to
    her that her son could not legally ride the e-motorcycle, and that she
    would face criminal charges if she continued to let him.

    "We have her on body-worn camera talking about and understanding the
    dangers and the illegality of this particular vehicle," Spitzer said.

    Eyewitness News tried speaking with Mejer at her Aliso Viejo home after
    she posted bond, but no one answered the door.

    Spitzer hopes her case sends a message to parents and prosecutors.

    "Either they're going to hate me for doing this, saying, 'Why the heck
    would you go after a parent when this is just their kids' activity?' Or they're gonna say, 'We better really research and thoroughly understand
    the kinds of motor vehicles we're providing to our kids,'" Spitzer said.
    "A lot of times prosecutors have to bring these kinds of test cases, if
    you will, to make sure other prosecutors throughout the country
    understand that this is the direction we need to go."

    The district attorney cannot comment on any potential juvenile charges
    the teen involved in the crash is facing.

    Mejer marks the third parent in Orange County this year alone charged
    with illegally allowing their child to ride an e-motorcycle.

    A GoFundMe has been set up to help support Ashman during his recovery.

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-ed-ashman-veteran-teacher-fighter

    Spitzer issued the following statement in a press release:

    "Parents who buy their child an E-motorcycle and let them ride them
    illegally or help modify e-Bikes to transform them into E-motorcycles
    are handing their children a loaded weapon - and those parents are going
    to be prosecuted. That is not a threat. That is a promise. This
    81-year-old man survived flying combat missions in Vietnam protecting
    freedom and now he is clinging to life because a mother refused to
    parent her child and he was run over in the street by a vehicle that
    should have never been on the road. There is absolutely no reason that
    an unlicensed, untrained child with no concept of the rules of the road should be riding a motorcycle that can go up to nearly 60 miles per hour
    next to cars on a public street and think that by some miracle they are
    going to be safe. The state Legislature has made it virtually impossible
    for prosecutors to hold juveniles accountable for committing serious
    crimes, and the only way to stop the carnage E-Bikes and E-motorcycles
    are causing across Orange County is to hold parents accountable for the crimes they allow their children to commit."

    https://abc7.com/post/aliso-viejo-mother-charged-teen-son-crashes-81-year -old-man-riding-motorcycle-leaving-critically-injured/18942740/
    Parents are responsible for their children. She could hve locked the E-motorcycle up or sold it opff or put in in storage.
    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From AMuzi@am@yellowjersey.org to rec.bicycles.tech on Sat Apr 25 14:37:47 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.bicycles.tech

    On 4/25/2026 2:19 PM, cyclintom wrote:
    On Sat Apr 25 10:06:31 2026 "B. Clark" wrote:
    LAKE FOREST, Calif. (KABC) -- An Orange County mother is facing felony
    charges after prosecutors say her teenage son critically injured an
    81-year-old man by crashing into him while riding an electric motorcycle

    The crash happened last week, and the victim remains hospitalized in
    critical condition. Prosecutors say the woman was warned about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle before the crash.

    As Ed Ashman fights for his life in the hospital after being struck by a
    14-year-old boy illegally riding an e-motorcycle in Lake Forest, the
    teen's mother is facing the consequences.

    "She's looking at over six years in state prison," Orange County
    District Attorney Todd Spitzer told Eyewitness News.

    Spitzer says his office has charged 50-year-old Tommi Jo Mejer with one
    felony count of child endangerment, one felony count of accessory after
    the fact to a crime, one misdemeanor count of contributing to the
    delinquency of a minor, one misdemeanor count of loaning a motor vehicle
    to an unlicensed driver and one misdemeanor count of providing false
    information to a peace officer. She was arrested on Tuesday.

    "I am going to prosecute parents to the fullest extent of the law,"
    Spitzer said. "As parents, whether you like it or not, we're responsible
    for the conduct of our children."

    Last week, investigators say Mejer's son was riding a Surron
    e-motorcycle, "doing wheelies" outside of El Toro High School, when he
    crashed into Ashman -- a Vietnam War veteran and beloved substitute
    teacher who was walking home from work. He is now hospitalized in
    critical condition.

    "We are praying that this substitute school teacher will have a full
    recovery, and that the charges don't change at all," Spitzer said.

    The law says e-bikes manufactured to stay under 20 mph have no age or
    licensing restrictions, but those that have been modified or can reach
    higher speeds are considered e-motorcycles and require a motorcycle
    license, insurance and registration.

    "It could go up to 60 mph with that particular model, and it could go
    from like 35 mph in two to three seconds," Spitzer said.

    Investigators say Mejer was warned by sheriff's deputies about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle in June of last year.

    Mejer reportedly called the sheriff's department, complaining that a
    neighbor was posting pictures of her son riding an e-motorcycle, saying
    he was out of control.

    The sheriff's department says it spent nearly 30 minutes explaining to
    her that her son could not legally ride the e-motorcycle, and that she
    would face criminal charges if she continued to let him.

    "We have her on body-worn camera talking about and understanding the
    dangers and the illegality of this particular vehicle," Spitzer said.

    Eyewitness News tried speaking with Mejer at her Aliso Viejo home after
    she posted bond, but no one answered the door.

    Spitzer hopes her case sends a message to parents and prosecutors.

    "Either they're going to hate me for doing this, saying, 'Why the heck
    would you go after a parent when this is just their kids' activity?' Or
    they're gonna say, 'We better really research and thoroughly understand
    the kinds of motor vehicles we're providing to our kids,'" Spitzer said.
    "A lot of times prosecutors have to bring these kinds of test cases, if
    you will, to make sure other prosecutors throughout the country
    understand that this is the direction we need to go."

    The district attorney cannot comment on any potential juvenile charges
    the teen involved in the crash is facing.

    Mejer marks the third parent in Orange County this year alone charged
    with illegally allowing their child to ride an e-motorcycle.

    A GoFundMe has been set up to help support Ashman during his recovery.

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-ed-ashman-veteran-teacher-fighter

    Spitzer issued the following statement in a press release:

    "Parents who buy their child an E-motorcycle and let them ride them
    illegally or help modify e-Bikes to transform them into E-motorcycles
    are handing their children a loaded weapon - and those parents are going
    to be prosecuted. That is not a threat. That is a promise. This
    81-year-old man survived flying combat missions in Vietnam protecting
    freedom and now he is clinging to life because a mother refused to
    parent her child and he was run over in the street by a vehicle that
    should have never been on the road. There is absolutely no reason that
    an unlicensed, untrained child with no concept of the rules of the road
    should be riding a motorcycle that can go up to nearly 60 miles per hour
    next to cars on a public street and think that by some miracle they are
    going to be safe. The state Legislature has made it virtually impossible
    for prosecutors to hold juveniles accountable for committing serious
    crimes, and the only way to stop the carnage E-Bikes and E-motorcycles
    are causing across Orange County is to hold parents accountable for the
    crimes they allow their children to commit."

    https://abc7.com/post/aliso-viejo-mother-charged-teen-son-crashes-81-year
    -old-man-riding-motorcycle-leaving-critically-injured/18942740/




    Parents are responsible for their children. She could hve locked the E-motorcycle up or sold it opff or put in in storage.


    'Responsible' in theory maybe. Not in our brave new world:

    https://nypost.com/video/mother-of-14-year-old-boy-who-brutally-stomped-teen-girl-speaks-to-reporters/

    The original incident: https://nypost.com/2026/04/23/us-news/nyc-girl-brutally-stomped-by-teen-boy-after-refusing-his-advances-was-lucky-to-survive-distraught-mom-says-while-calling-for-justice/
    --
    Andrew Muzi
    am@yellowjersey.org
    Open every day since 1 April, 1971
    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Roger Merriman@roger@sarlet.com to rec.bicycles.tech on Sat Apr 25 20:43:06 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.bicycles.tech

    AMuzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
    On 4/25/2026 2:19 PM, cyclintom wrote:
    On Sat Apr 25 10:06:31 2026 "B. Clark" wrote:
    LAKE FOREST, Calif. (KABC) -- An Orange County mother is facing felony
    charges after prosecutors say her teenage son critically injured an
    81-year-old man by crashing into him while riding an electric motorcycle >>>
    The crash happened last week, and the victim remains hospitalized in
    critical condition. Prosecutors say the woman was warned about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle before the crash.

    As Ed Ashman fights for his life in the hospital after being struck by a >>> 14-year-old boy illegally riding an e-motorcycle in Lake Forest, the
    teen's mother is facing the consequences.

    "She's looking at over six years in state prison," Orange County
    District Attorney Todd Spitzer told Eyewitness News.

    Spitzer says his office has charged 50-year-old Tommi Jo Mejer with one
    felony count of child endangerment, one felony count of accessory after
    the fact to a crime, one misdemeanor count of contributing to the
    delinquency of a minor, one misdemeanor count of loaning a motor vehicle >>> to an unlicensed driver and one misdemeanor count of providing false
    information to a peace officer. She was arrested on Tuesday.

    "I am going to prosecute parents to the fullest extent of the law,"
    Spitzer said. "As parents, whether you like it or not, we're responsible >>> for the conduct of our children."

    Last week, investigators say Mejer's son was riding a Surron
    e-motorcycle, "doing wheelies" outside of El Toro High School, when he
    crashed into Ashman -- a Vietnam War veteran and beloved substitute
    teacher who was walking home from work. He is now hospitalized in
    critical condition.

    "We are praying that this substitute school teacher will have a full
    recovery, and that the charges don't change at all," Spitzer said.

    The law says e-bikes manufactured to stay under 20 mph have no age or
    licensing restrictions, but those that have been modified or can reach
    higher speeds are considered e-motorcycles and require a motorcycle
    license, insurance and registration.

    "It could go up to 60 mph with that particular model, and it could go
    from like 35 mph in two to three seconds," Spitzer said.

    Investigators say Mejer was warned by sheriff's deputies about letting
    her son illegally ride the e-motorcycle in June of last year.

    Mejer reportedly called the sheriff's department, complaining that a
    neighbor was posting pictures of her son riding an e-motorcycle, saying
    he was out of control.

    The sheriff's department says it spent nearly 30 minutes explaining to
    her that her son could not legally ride the e-motorcycle, and that she
    would face criminal charges if she continued to let him.

    "We have her on body-worn camera talking about and understanding the
    dangers and the illegality of this particular vehicle," Spitzer said.

    Eyewitness News tried speaking with Mejer at her Aliso Viejo home after
    she posted bond, but no one answered the door.

    Spitzer hopes her case sends a message to parents and prosecutors.

    "Either they're going to hate me for doing this, saying, 'Why the heck
    would you go after a parent when this is just their kids' activity?' Or
    they're gonna say, 'We better really research and thoroughly understand
    the kinds of motor vehicles we're providing to our kids,'" Spitzer said. >>> "A lot of times prosecutors have to bring these kinds of test cases, if
    you will, to make sure other prosecutors throughout the country
    understand that this is the direction we need to go."

    The district attorney cannot comment on any potential juvenile charges
    the teen involved in the crash is facing.

    Mejer marks the third parent in Orange County this year alone charged
    with illegally allowing their child to ride an e-motorcycle.

    A GoFundMe has been set up to help support Ashman during his recovery.

    https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-ed-ashman-veteran-teacher-fighter >>>
    Spitzer issued the following statement in a press release:

    "Parents who buy their child an E-motorcycle and let them ride them
    illegally or help modify e-Bikes to transform them into E-motorcycles
    are handing their children a loaded weapon - and those parents are going >>> to be prosecuted. That is not a threat. That is a promise. This
    81-year-old man survived flying combat missions in Vietnam protecting
    freedom and now he is clinging to life because a mother refused to
    parent her child and he was run over in the street by a vehicle that
    should have never been on the road. There is absolutely no reason that
    an unlicensed, untrained child with no concept of the rules of the road
    should be riding a motorcycle that can go up to nearly 60 miles per hour >>> next to cars on a public street and think that by some miracle they are
    going to be safe. The state Legislature has made it virtually impossible >>> for prosecutors to hold juveniles accountable for committing serious
    crimes, and the only way to stop the carnage E-Bikes and E-motorcycles
    are causing across Orange County is to hold parents accountable for the
    crimes they allow their children to commit."

    https://abc7.com/post/aliso-viejo-mother-charged-teen-son-crashes-81-year >>> -old-man-riding-motorcycle-leaving-critically-injured/18942740/




    Parents are responsible for their children. She could hve locked the
    E-motorcycle up or sold it opff or put in in storage.


    'Responsible' in theory maybe. Not in our brave new world:

    https://nypost.com/video/mother-of-14-year-old-boy-who-brutally-stomped-teen-girl-speaks-to-reporters/

    The original incident: https://nypost.com/2026/04/23/us-news/nyc-girl-brutally-stomped-by-teen-boy-after-refusing-his-advances-was-lucky-to-survive-distraught-mom-says-while-calling-for-justice/

    ThatrCOs unfortunately has always happened, we are more aware of it plus algorithms and so on, ie hate gets more response which makes websites more money from advertisingrCa

    Roger Merriman

    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Linux NewsLink 1.2