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The Irish government has moved to outlaw scrambler-style off-road motorcycles in all public places after the death of 16-year-old Grace Lynch, who was struck by a scrambler in Finglas, Dublin on Jan. 25.
Cabinet on Feb. 4 authorised Transport Minister Darragh O’Brien to draft emergency regulations — to be introduced within weeks — that will explicitly ban scramblers from roads, parks and other public spaces, close legal gaps from a 2023 law, and provide a statutory definition of a scrambler.
Measures will strengthen Garda powers to seize vehicles, raise charges applied to seized machines and permit the destruction of bikes taken off the street.
Officials said enforcement tools could include drones and follow-up seizures at storage locations rather than high-risk road pursuits.
The move, to be known as “Grace’s Law” at the request of the victim’s mother and endorsed by Taoiseach Micheál Martin, follows public outrage and cross-party criticism that earlier regulations were not implemented.
The package also signals forthcoming tighter rules for e-scooters and e-bikes, including mandatory helmets and high-visibility clothing.
Government figures say hundreds to more than 1,000 scramblers, quads and similar vehicles have been seized under powers since 2023.






















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