In Memory of Geoffrey Gattis & Elizabeth Gattis (January 12, 2021)

Troopers say a tractor-trailer and a Lexus, driven by 68-year-old Geoffrey Gattis with his wife, 68-year-old Elizabeth Gattis, in the passenger seat, slowed down in the northbound lane of the highway when another tractor-trailer, driven by a 38-year-old South Portland man, stuck them from behind.

The force of the impact pushed the car into the back of the first tractor-trailer, crushing the smaller vehicle. The couple died at the scene. Two killed in Maine Turnpike crash after police chase caused slow traffic

Because the bottom of a truck is higher than the bumper of passenger vehicles, when there is a collision the smaller vehicle easily slides under the truck and the first point of impact is the windshield. Seatbelts, airbags, and car crumple zones do not function as intended in underride crashes —frontside, and rear — leaving passenger vehicle occupants vulnerable to life-threatening injuries.

Geoffrey & Elizabeth Gattis, Precious Ones Gone Too Soon

See Underride Crash Memorials posted here and at #STOPunderrides Tweets. To add photos or more information on this story or to add other underride crashes to be remembered, send an email to underridemap@gmail.com. Please use this Interactive Underride Crash Map Crash Location Input Form to provide us with accurate information . (Note: the map is currently not online; but we would keep the information for future updating and to aid in underride advocacy efforts.)

Support improving Underride Protection on trailers: Contact your legislators with this User-Friendly TAKE ACTION online tool.

How You Can Help

Please sign this petition: Congress, Act Now To End Deadly Truck Underrides.

Note: In order to raise awareness and preserve the memories of underride victims — precious ones gone too soon — I have been writing memorial posts on what appear to me to be underride crashes. I am not a crash reconstructionist, and I do not have all the facts on these crashes; but underride should be investigated as a potential factor in truck crash injuries and deaths.

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