Quote from that article "The scooter slammed into the front quarter-panel of the ambulance". LOL I hardly see it possible for a 49cc scooter to slam that hard into the ambulance, I take it the ambulance actually slammed into the scooter........ Anyway this brings me to a story, I was traveling home one time a year or two back, clear night out. At a 4 way intersection, with signals both ways (Green light for me), and traveling roughly the speed limit (not 20+mph over, I was maybe going 30 in a 25) and I'm just cruising through the intersection and literally 5 feet before I went through the intersection a fire truck comes blaring from my right totally blowing the red light and coming feet from t-boning me. I had my SNELL helmet on, and the direction the truck came from there is a two story brick office building that blocked all sight / sound of the truck. Anyway the moral of my story is emergency vehicles are dangerous, I had NO sign of that truck coming, and they didn't even look if anyone was coming just blew right through the red light, if I had been going 50 it would have been over with. I see cops going 90+ on a 35mph road in front of my work every day, no lights on usually just hauling ass. I've seen motorcycle cops on the same road going well over 100mph with no lights. Everyone that drives these vehicles are NORMAL PEOPLE, just because they are cops (Don't get me started with them...), fire fighters, EMT drivers etc does not give them super driving abilities!!!!! We will never know in that Las Vegas story if that was the fault of the ambulance or scooterist, but its kinda sad how they just write the article like it was 100% the fault of the scooterist. If an emergency vehicle is traveling at a high rate of speed the Doppler effect plays a huge role in hearing the siren. Like I said, this almost happened to me and it was late at night, and I was not cutting traffic or doing anything stupid, it came out of nowhere and I probably would have been on the news "Scooterist does not watch out for fire truck and dies".