After a second fatal crash in just over a week,Watch Batman Begins Online Revel is shutting down in New York City.
Earlier this month in Brooklyn, TV news reporter Nina Kapur was killed in a Revel accident. The company had at least 1,000 vehicles in New York City, which could be rented by the minute.
Kapur was riding as a passenger when she was thrown off after the moped driver swerved. Then, early Tuesday morning, a 32-year-old rider died after a crash in Queens.
A Revel spokesperson said in an email statement that the company — which started renting the electric vehicles in NYC in March 2018 — was "voluntarily shutting down New York City service" as of Tuesday.
SEE ALSO: TV news reporter dies after being ejected from Revel mopedDuring the shutdown, Revel said it was going to "further review and strengthen" its "rider accountability and safety measures."
NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio announced what could be a temporary removal "until we can find a way to make shared mopeds safe." Revel also said it was "actively communicating with city officials and look forward to serving the New York City community again in the near future."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Revel also operates in Washington, D.C., Austin, Miami, and Oakland and declined to comment on any changes to those cities. Last month the company announced it received a permit to operate 432 mopeds in San Francisco starting in August.
Topics Electric Vehicles
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Twitch plays the stock market using $50,000 of actual money
Adorable new 'Game of Thrones' Funkos will make you forget the tiresome bloodshed
Like Kickstarter, but for legal cases
The internet turned this epic MLB brawl into a goldmine for funny memes
Step into the octagon with a live UFC fight in virtual reality
Adorable new 'Game of Thrones' Funkos will make you forget the tiresome bloodshed
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。