A B.C. granny was slapped with a $368 ticket for distracted driving even though her cell phone was nowhere near her hands.

According to reports out of the Vancouver area, Randi Kramer, a 70-something-year-old grandmother who had never received a ticket in her 50-plus years of driving, was hit with the fine on Monday after being approached by a cop on foot while stopped at a red light.

Kramer was sitting with both hands on the steering wheel, with her phone sitting in her car’s cup holder, when she heard a tap on the window, her son Trevor told the Surrey Now-Leader newspaper. She was startled to see it was a uniformed cop, not a panhandler, as expected.

“He said that it was safe driving month and he was going to ticket her for having her cellphone charging and visible,” her son told the paper, adding that his mother “went out of her way to comply with the laws.”

Randi Kramer told Global News she didn’t think she was breaking the law and was surprised to get the ticket. She plans on fighting it and Vancouver lawyer Kyra Lee, who saw Trevor Kramer’s post about the ticket on Twitter, has taken on the case pro bono.

Police ticket for having the phone charging. It’s ridiculous as it is not the distraction the government wishes to prohibit. Tell your mom to call me. We will help her out. — Kyla Lee (@IRPlawyer) September 30, 2019

“Police ticket for having the phone charging. It’s ridiculous as it is not the distraction the government wishes to prohibit. Tell your mom to call me. We will help her out,” Lee replied on Twitter.

An unnamed Vancouver police spokesperson told the Now-Leader in an email that there was a precedent for ticketing a person for distracted driving even though they didn’t have the phone in hand.

“This would apply if a device is turned on, within reach of the driver, and causing the driver to be distracted while driving,” the spokesperson said.

But there is also a B.C. precedent for having the charge thrown out.

A B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled earlier this year that having your cell phone near you while driving was no longer grounds for a ticket.

Justice Murray Blok ruled in favour of a driver who had been ticketed for wedging his phone between the folds of the passenger seat.