I'm sorry Jburr, but what gray area of the law are you referring to. The electric assisted bicycle definition there has no requirements to meet FMVSS there. Using Idaho law on a bike in another state is kinda pointless. If you read the context of what I'm saying you'd know that I was talking about how law enforcement and courts may interpret the grey areas of the statutes based upon the persons' in question history with those entities. It seems that the guy in the article has had a few run ins with the law and the courts which could have created bias against him in the 1st place. Not good for a case that could set a precident for those grey areas for the rest of us. I never compared Idaho law to Oregon law. I pointed out how some Idaho's statutes could have a grey area and be decided in a similar fashion and used some lady that got stopped by the Emmett police as an example.
Other than the 1 time he was riding with a broken peddle, the law says he is legal. Most cops would have let that slide, if they had even pulled him over in the first place. Apparently the law enforcement believed he is riding illegally.
Even the cops don't know the law as shown with the comment;
“My thinking is that if he’s not pedaling it, it becomes a motor vehicle under the statute,” Springfield police officer Brian Gay said Thursday. Apparently the judge agreed with the police and found that the guy was riding illegally by not having a valid driver's license.
And he wasn't convicted on the missing peddle alone SANGESF. The article clearly states;
Strickland’s decision boils down to this: He wrote that “factory specifications” indicate McClain’s vehicle is capable of traveling faster than 20 mph, and that it had a missing pedal when he was stopped and ticketed in one instance. Therefore, it doesn’t meet the state’s legal definition of an electric-assisted bicycle, the judge said.
So there are 2 points the judge made that indicated this guy was riding illegally:
1: The e-bike was capable of speeds greater than what the law allows to be ridden without a valid license and,
2: The e-bike was missing a pedal thus making it a self propelled vehicle instead of an electric-assisted bike.
He even says he provided proof that his bike does less than 20 mph. As far as the factory specs, I'm sure that everyone here is getting their 150mpg right? after all, a company wouldn't stretch the truth to sell a product, would they?