Another trooper has been “seriously injured” in a hit-and-run crash, according to Mass State Police.

A person on a stolen motorcycle reportedly slammed into a trooper who was outside his cruiser on Revere Beach Boulevard in front of the State Police Barracks just before 5 p.m. on Monday.

“As a result of the collision, the Trooper was propelled approximately 45 feet and seriously injured,” State Police said in a statement.

EMS transported the trooper to a Boston hospital, where he was in critical condition.

State Police Crime Scene Services Section and the Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section responded to the scene.

Police were searching for the suspect who fled the scene on foot, and they were urging anyone with information to call the Revere Barracks at 781-284-0038.

This incident comes less than two weeks after a trooper on the Mass Pike was seriously injured in a hit-and-run crash.

Mass State Police Trooper Sean Clark was conducting a traffic stop at around 2:20 a.m. when a 32-year-old woman allegedly struck him with her vehicle on the side of I-90 west in Chicopee. She was allegedly driving drunk.

The trooper was rushed with serious injuries to Baystate Medical Center, which is a level 1 trauma center. Less than a week later, he was released from the hospital and transferred to a rehab facility.

Naisha Rodriguez, 32, of Springfield, was arrested in connection with that hit-and-run crash.

She was arraigned and charged with operating under the influence causing serious bodily injury, misleading a police investigation, and leaving the scene of a motor vehicle crash causing personal injury. Bail was set at $500,000.

Recently on Beacon Hill, there was a bill hearing to strengthen the “Move Over Law” — with the goal of increasing safety on the roads.

Under the current law, a driver violating the Move Over Law can face a $100 fine.

The proposed bill would establish a $250 fine for a first offense, a $500 fine for a second offense, and a $1,000 fine for a third or subsequent offense. Also, any violation that results in injury to another person could be punished by a fine of $2,500 or up to one year in jail.