A child’s death prompts questions about brake safety on e-bikes

Two years ago, 12-year-old Molly Steinsapir was sitting behind her best friend on a borrowed electric bike when the girls started descending a steep hill in Los Angeles. Molly’s friend pulled the brakes, but the bike began to shimmy, and the girls crashed. Molly, who was wearing a helmet, sustained severe head injuries.

After the accident, Molly’s mother posted a call for prayer on Twitter, rallying hundreds of thousands of new followers who used the hashtag #TeamMolly to cheer for the child’s recovery. But after multiple brain surgeries, Molly died on Feb. 15, 2021.

Photos of Molly Steinsapir and her family. Molly, 12, died in February 2021 after sustaining severe head injuries in a crash on an electric bicycle in Los Angeles.

While Molly’s death prompted an outpouring of grief on social media, the tragedy has taken a new turn. Her accident is raising questions about the safety of e-bikes – specifically the quality of e-bike brakes – and whether the wildly popular bicycles are safe for young people to ride.

Molly’s parents, who are both attorneys, have sued Rad Power Bikes Inc., maker of the e-bike the girls were riding and the largest e-bike company in the United States, claiming that its bikes “inappropriately” are marketed to children and contain “multiple design defects.”

The case, already a hot-button topic in the cycling community, garnered renewed attention this month with the publication of a lengthy investigation by Bicycling magazine. It sparked a viral wave of passionate, sometimes excoriating online chatter about e-bikes and their possible benefits, downsides, price, quality, regulation, and, especially, their appropriateness for young riders.

Molly Steinsapir, 12, died in February 2021 after sustaining severe head injuries in a crash on an electric bicycle on this street in Los Angeles.

E-bikes, with their battery-powered motors and pedaling help, have surged in popularity in the United States and around the world as an eco-friendly alternative to cars and a less strenuous and sweaty option for getting around compared to a regular bike. By all accounts, they are the fastest-growing segment of the bike market, with sales topping 420,000 in 2021 and probably exceeding that last year, according to data from PeopleForBikes, the industry trade group for bicycle manufacturers.

There are three types of “e-bikes,” bicycles equipped with a battery and motor. Many are capable of carrying extra passengers or cargo, unlike most conventional bikes. Class 1 e-bikes, the most common, are pedal-assist models with motors that work only while you’re pedaling. They have a top speed of 20 mph. Ride faster, and the motor automatically flips off.

Class 2 e-bikes feature a throttle, so the motor powers the bike even if you don’t pedal. It stops working if you exceed 20 mph, though. Molly was a passenger on a Class 2 model.