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Woman Get's Traffic Ticket During Rush-Hour Birth
Joanne Rathe/Globe StaffJennifer Davis, with Charlotte, said her contractions were 3 minutes apart when the state trooper made them wait for a citation. (Joanne Rathe/Globe Staff)
December 04, 2008
All too often, the congested roads of Greater Boston conspire with the vagaries of childbirth to leave a mother-to-be in a car on the roadside at one of life’s most critical moments. A hard-bitten state trooper shows up and morphs into a highway midwife, clearing the newborn’s nose and mouth, cutting the cord, and sometimes even saving a life.
This is not one of those stories.
Jennifer Davis was stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on Nov. 18, her contractions just 3 minutes apart. Her husband, John, was trying to appear calm for his wife’s sake, driving in the breakdown lane of Route 2. They pulled up behind a state trooper to ask whether they could continue using the lane to reach the next exit, near Alewife Station.
Not only did the trooper say no, he gave them a $100 citation for driving in the breakdown lane, made them wait for their citation while he finished writing someone else’s ticket, and even seemed to ask for proof of pregnancy, Jennifer Davis said.
“He said, ’What’s under your jacket?’ I said, ‘My belly,’ " Davis said. “He waited and gestured with his head like, ‘OK, let’s see it.’ He waited for me to unzip my jacket. I mean, it was so clear that I was pregnant.”
The Davises say the contretemps occurred after two other troopers they encountered had waved them along in the highway breakdown lane, allowing them to evade gridlock while advising them to be cautious and keep their hazard lights on.
While State Police spokesman David Procopio declined to comment on the merits of this stop, he noted that state law prohibits driving in breakdown lanes on Route 2.
“The trooper made a judgment call to enforce the law governing the use of the breakdown lane,” said Procopio. “If the couple does choose to submit a letter of complaint, we’ll review it in accordance with our procedure.”
The officer who gave the citation – Trooper Michael Galluccio of the Brighton barracks, according to his identification number – could not immediately be reached for comment.
Though the Davises live about 30 miles away in Dracut, Jennifer Davis, 38, wanted to have her baby at Mount Auburn, where she had also given birth to her 7-year-old son, Brendan.
“For 10 months we had been saying, ‘As long as I don’t go into labor during rush hour’ – which we did,” said Davis, a social worker for a visiting nurse group affiliated with the hospital.
They left for Cambridge after dropping Brendan off at school. Her contractions were about 5 minutes apart.
But the roads were so clogged that John Davis began using the breakdown lane. Davis – whose driving record has six speeding violations over the past 20 years, according to the state Registry of Motor Vehicles – said he tried to get troopers’ permission to use the emergency lanes when they encountered them along their journey.
saltyscalop
11 months ago
42 comments
Never trust a cop.
paloma
11 months ago
12 comments
Oh i so sorry for that woman i bet those min. with the cop where agonizing. Why must there always be a person who rather make emergency stuations worse, than just help out.
AbusyRN2go
11 months ago
12114 comments
This cop was a jerk! I hope they fight this one
scorpio80kg
11 months ago
18 comments
I think hethe trooper should have let this one slide and given them an escort to the hospital. I know I would not have wanted to give birth on the side of the road!!
ToxicShock
11 months ago
18 comments
Why didn't this couple call an ambulance after they dropped their son off at school? They knew traffic would be congested with the morning rush.
I don't think the trooper should have given them such a hassle, but they deserve the ticket.
hadassah
11 months ago
8 comments
I think the trooper is a poop but it is his job and he was right. there is a fine line here and I dunno if I was on either side what I would do. I wasa paramedic for 18 years before becominga nurse. I have seen a lot. The one thing I don't understand is troopers usually communicate everything they see all day long. So why didn't the troopers tell the troopers ahead what was coming? They have discrestion and they should to allow people to bend the rules when they feel it is right. But they don't have to. Some are straight arrows and would give a ticket to their own mothers. I have seen it. Either way, was that baby safe with what they were doing? That is the most important issue. A woman in labor can go in 5 minutes or 5 hours and there is really no way of knowing. So what was the plan if she did go faster? In her situation an ambulance probably would have been safer for her.
neenrn
11 months ago
10 comments
I bet this trooper has a really tiny penis ........
Seckenrode
11 months ago
14 comments
trooper is a prick, file a complaint/.. keep the story in the news.. eventuallly, they may drop the ticket..
Kristinaveale
11 months ago
56 comments
I agree, giving birth is a life or death situation. That trooper is just a JERK, who obviously doesn't have children. I don't have children, but I completely understand what happens when a woman is in labor. He should be ashamed of himself, perhaps he would understand if we put a baby in his stomach and made him squeeze it out.. haha yeah. right.
Shan4691
11 months ago
5402 comments
Are you kidding me??? That trooper is a jackass!
crys5881
11 months ago
32 comments
This is so ridiculous! Let me say as a mother, had I gone into labor during rush hour you better believe that Im gonna drive down the shoulder or breakdown lane to get to where the hospital is. What an ass that tooper was- I dont care what state law says, if your in labor......drive whereever you need to, to get to the nearest hospital. Shame on that officer, had it been his wife, daughter or sister in that situation I bet he would have acted differently!