I've found a Li capacitor in a toy RC car, too.
Lithium capacitors are safe to accidental cut or piercing (when stabbed, they don't burst in smoke or flames, like Li-Ion batteries), but they have both a maximum voltage specs and a MINIMUM voltage, too. Can't be discharged to 0V. They require the same handling precautions as Li batteries (during assembling in the final circuit), and a battery management/protection, too. The sad part is they need to never be discharged to zero volts. If discharged less than 203V, they get permanently damaged. They come precharged from the factory, and require same handling precautions as raw Li-Ion cells.
What's worst is Li capacitors self-discharge much faster than Li-Ion batteries, so if you forget a Li capacitor discharged at its minimal voltage, with time it will self-discharge even lower than that, and will become permanently damaged.