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Ashman, a once-decorated captain in the US Marine Corps, was making his way home from his role as a substitute teacher at a high school in Lake Forest when tragedy struck. Critically injured in a shocking incident, Ashman passed away on Thursday. The aftermath saw Mejer, a resident of Aliso Viejo in Orange County, facing serious legal repercussions. Already charged with felony child endangerment, Mejer now confronts an additional charge of involuntary manslaughter.
The incident has drawn sharp criticism from authorities. “This mother essentially handed her 14-year-old son a deadly weapon,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer remarked in a statement. He underscored the severity of the situation, highlighting that despite repeated warnings about the dangers, Mejer allowed her son to continue illegally riding an e-motorcycle, ultimately leading to a fatal outcome.
Currently, Mejer has not yet had her day in court, and records show no public defender is representing her at this time. The District Attorney’s Office did provide The Associated Press with the name of a private attorney who might be defending Mejer. However, attempts to reach this attorney for comment have not been met with a response.
Mejer has not yet appeared in court, and there was no public defender listed in records for her.
The District Attorney’s Office gave The Associated Press the name of a private attorney who may be representing Mejer; that person did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
Mejer was also charged with felony accessory after the fact and misdemeanor counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor and providing false information to an officer.
In June 2025, prosecutors said, Mejer called the Sheriff’s Department to complain that someone was posting pictures of her son riding the e-motorcycle.
In an interaction with deputies that was recorded by body camera, she said she bought the vehicle and “knew that he drove it recklessly.”
She was warned by deputies that she could face criminal charges for letting him ride it illegally, prosecutors said.
A bike is classified as an e-motorcycle under state law in California if it has an electric motor with more than 750 watts of power or can reach speeds above 32 kph without having to pedal.
Riders are required to be at least 16 years old and have a motorcycle license.
The Surron e-motorcycle in question is capable of 90 kph speeds, according to manufacturers.
In the hours after the April collision, Mejer told deputies that neither she nor her son owned a Surron e-motorcycle or had access to one, prosecutors said.
The district attorney’s office said it could not discuss whether the boy will face prosecution because it is a juvenile case.
Orange County prosecutors have filed child endangerment charges against three parents this year for letting children ride e-motorcycles illegally.
And in Contra Costa County, in Northern California, parents were charged after their child crashed into a minivan.
In the past, prosecutions of parents were typically seen in truancy cases since the law specifically mentions their liability, said Lawrence Rosenthal, a law professor at Chapman University.
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But parental criminal liability in other circumstances has gained attention in recent years, especially in prosecutions and convictions related to shootings committed by minors.
“This is a very new theory. There’s not a long, robust history,” Rosenthal said.
In the cases involving shootings, prosecutors have to prove that the parent committed some act of “criminal negligence” that led to a death, such as providing access to a gun, according to Rosenthal.
However the legal theories that were used might be more difficult to prove in e-motorcycle cases, Rosenthal said.
Prosecutors will have to show that parents knew the risk of an e-motorcycle when letting their child ride one, and firearms represent a “far easier-to-grasp threat to human life.”
“Is it reasonably foreseeable that a child’s going to kill somebody?” Rosenthal said.