AG百家乐在线官网

Police could be equipped with 'Ghostbusters-style' devices to stop e-bikes being used for crime

The "ginormous" backpacks use an electromagnetic pulse to trick the vehicles into shutting down.

Pic: Snap/Shutterstock

FILM STILLS OF 'GHOSTBUSTERS' WITH 1984, DAN AYKROYD, BILL MURRAY, HAROLD RAMIS, IVAN REITMAN IN 1984

1984
Image: The stars of the 1984 classic Ghostbusters. Pic: Snap/Shutterstock
Why you can trust Sky News

Police officers could be equipped with devices likened to the proton packs used in Ghostbusters to stop e-bikes and e-scooters being used for crime.

Gavin Stephens, the chairman of the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC), said he hopes the "experimental" technology could help stop the vehicles involved in offences such as street robberies and mobile phone thefts.

Described as a "ginormous backpack", the gadget has drawn comparisons with the capture device used in the Ghostbusters films.

It works by firing an electromagnetic pulse at an e-bike or e-scooter in the line of sight, sending a signal to confuse the electric motor into thinking it's overheating.

The motor, which has an in-built safety system, then shuts down, bringing the vehicle to a halt.

The device was demonstrated to police at a science and technology fair in Farnborough, Hampshire, earlier this year but is unlikely to be available for use for months or even years.

Read more from Sky News:
Obesity drug 'cuts risk of heart attack or stroke'

Would you try this environmentally friendly wonder food?

Mr Stephens said he has been told the device "has the potential to be useful with normal combustion engine vehicles as well".

Paul Taylor, the NPCC's chief scientific adviser, is overseeing the project with industry figures to make the kit available for use by police officers.

Mr Stephens said the popularity of the vehicles has changed the nature of police pursuits, with "lightning-fast electric bikes around town and city centres" making them "really difficult".

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Be the first to get Breaking News

Install the Sky News app for free

He said the devices are "the sort of new tech that we need", adding: "It basically interferes with the electric motor to trick the electric motor to think it's overheating and that goes through a safe shutdown procedure."

"At the minute it's like a great, big ginormous backpack-type thing, because it's basically a battle of how much power they can get."