Trooper's vehicle hit on Interstate 41 in Winnebago County (Courtesy: Wisconsin State Patrol)
MILWAUKEE - Two on-duty Wisconsin State Patrol troopers escaped injury this week after drivers hit their cruisers.
Emergency lights were activated in both incidents, which means drivers should have moved over or slowed down to protect the responders and the public.
A trooper was pulled over on the shoulder of Interstate 94 in Dane County on Monday afternoon, Dec. 6 when an inattentive semi tractor-trailer sideswiped his cruiser. Captured on cruiser video, the trooper was sitting inside the vehicle assisting with a traffic stop at the time. The semi driver did not move out of the right lane or slow down when passing the cruiser.
SIGN UP TODAY: Get daily headlines, breaking news emails from FOX6 News
On Wednesday morning, Dec. 8, a driver on Interstate 41 in Winnebago County lost control while traveling too fast in icy conditions and passing a crash scene. A trooper was outside checking on the people involved in the initial crash when the vehicle rear-ended his cruiser that was pulled over on an off-ramp.
No one was hurt in either crash, but they were close calls for those involved.
"Our troopers are lucky to have survived these incidents. They put their lives at risk to help keep our roads safe," Superintendent Anthony Burrell said. "We need every driver to recognize the dangers first responders face and move over when their emergency lights are activated."
Wisconsin's Move Over law requires drivers to move out of the lane closest to stopped law enforcement vehicles, ambulances, fire trucks, tow trucks, utility vehicles or highway maintenance vehicles with warning lights activated. If a car cannot move over, drivers must slow down.
Gov. Tony Evers recently signed a new law in Wisconsin that officially defines an emergency or roadside response area and creates a new crime and penalty for traffic violations that lead to injury in an emergency zone. Fines may double for certain violations.
FREE DOWNLOAD: Get breaking news alerts in the FOX6 News app for iOS or Android.
Violations of the Move Over law can result in a citation of $263 or more if someone is hurt or killed. There were 632 convictions for Move Over law violations in 2020.
In the incidents that happened this week, citations are pending investigations by Dane and Winnebago counties.
This browser does not support the Video element.