The first hours of a new year are meant to hold promise 鈥 a fresh start, a clean slate. But in Nelson, as the city stirred under the glow of streetlights and celebration, tragedy struck. Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming would not see the dawn of 2025. In an instant, a routine patrol turned catastrophic, leaving a community shattered and marking a heartbreaking first in New Zealand鈥檚 policing history. Senior journalist Anna Leask reports.

Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming. Photo / NZ Police
It was 2.10am when all hell broke loose in Buxton Square.
Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming, 62, and Senior Sergeant Adam Ramsay were foot patrolling the area when a vehicle driven by a member of the public drove towards them at speed.
Both officers were hit 鈥 hard 鈥 and were critically injured.
Soon after, at Nelson Hospital, Fleming died. The damage to her body was catastrophic and unsurvivable.
Ramsay was rushed into the surgery that would save his life.
Around this time, Commissioner Richard Chambers鈥 cellphone rang.
He had just gone to bed after finishing a shift with his troops on the beat in the Tauranga area.
鈥淚鈥檇 just gone to sleep, and the phone rang, and that was when I was advised about what had happened,鈥 he said.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers fronting a press conference hours after his colleague Lyn fleming was killed on duty. Photo / Tim Cuff
鈥淚 said to my wife, 鈥業鈥檓 going to have to turn the light on and iron my shirt and drive to Wellington and get to Nelson as quick as I can鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the worst possible thing for any police person 鈥 but it鈥檚 particularly hard five weeks into your job as a commissioner, which is how I found myself 鈥 when you lose a colleague in the line of duty, going about their job that they love for the community.鈥
Chambers had known Fleming personally for many years. So, he wasn鈥檛 only reeling from her violent death professionally.
鈥淚 knew Lyn, I worked with Lyn. She was an absolute superstar,鈥 he told the Herald.
鈥淪he was one of the most impressive policewomen that I鈥檝e ever worked with. She was a person that I used to call on when I was the Tasman District Commander, when I had a particularly tough issue or thing that I needed to find a sensible way forward for.
鈥淟ynn helped me many times deal with things. She was a remarkable woman who I鈥檓 personally very proud to have known and worked with. But all New Zealanders can be proud of the calibre of a police officer like Lyn Fleming.鈥

A memorial plaque to Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming was attached to the flagpole outside the Nelson Police Station within days of her death. Photo / Tracy Neal
Fleming, 62, is survived by her husband Bryn and adult children Rayna and Aren; parents Ray and Colleen and siblings Woody, Carol and Jo.
The Fleming family did not want to speak about the tragedy ahead of the anniversary.
By then, they would have endured their first Christmas without Fleming 鈥 and are undoubtedly preparing themselves for the trial of the man charged over her death.
Hayden Tasker, 32, is facing six charges, including the murder of Fleming and the attempted murder of Ramsay.
He is due to go on trial in the High Court at Christchurch in May 2026.
Police allege the brutal incident was 鈥渃ompletely unprovoked鈥 and that the vehicle Tasker was driving was 鈥渂eing used as a weapon鈥.

Hayden Donald Jason Tasker has been charged with murdering Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming. Photo / Tracy Neal
Fleming was the first police officer ever killed in the line of duty in the Nelson area, and the first female police officer killed on the job in New Zealand.
At her funeral, Chambers revealed that as a senior officer, Fleming did not have to work the New Year鈥檚 Eve to New Year鈥檚 Day shift.
But she wanted to support her staff.
鈥淎t the start of the shift, Lyn produced a range of snacks for her colleagues to help keep them going through the night shift,鈥 he said.
鈥淪he cared deeply about her staff.鈥
Chambers will mark the day of Fleming鈥檚 death on the frontline in Nelson 鈥 taking on the same shift she did alongside her colleagues.
鈥淭he right place for me to be on this New Year鈥檚 Eve is Nelson, alongside my colleagues who have had a tough year,鈥 he said.
鈥淚鈥檝e made that decision because I know that the team down there, have done it tough - we鈥檝e all done it tough, but not as much as Lyn鈥檚 people down there in Nelson and Tasman.
鈥淪o I鈥檓 going to be out there with them through the night.鈥
Chambers plans to start the shift 鈥済etting behind the barbecue鈥 and feeding those on the late shift.

The Herald attended Fleming's funeral several weeks after her alleged murder.
Then he will head out on the street with Superintendent Tracy Thompson, the Tasman District Commander.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just the right place to be this year because of Lyn鈥檚 death,鈥 he said.
鈥淭his time of the year is one of the busiest times for us in policing. There is alcohol consumption, people partying and celebrating - and that鈥檚 fine, but that brings with it its own set of issues.
鈥淎nd also it鈥檚 a tough time for family harm. There鈥檚 a lot of pressure on families and separated families for all sorts of reasons. So, in policing generally, it鈥檚 a busy time of year for us.鈥
Chambers acknowledged police sacrificed a lot when they work over the holidays, missing time with their own families to keep their communities safe.
鈥淏oth police officers and our civilian colleagues sacrifice a lot because we鈥檝e got a job to do,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 no different for me. I want to be working on New Year鈥檚 Eve with my staff because I鈥檓 just like them, and I want to be there to support them.鈥

The family of Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming at her funeral. Photo / George Heard
He said it wouldn鈥檛 just be Nelson staff thinking of Fleming on January 1 鈥 and in the lead-up and days that followed.
鈥淧olice staff working across the country on New Year鈥檚 Eve will know that it was that night when Lyn was doing her job and lost her life.
鈥淵ou know, we鈥檒l be thinking about this for many years to come 鈥 I think New Year鈥檚 Eve this year is going to be tough, and I have no doubt that through the entire evening it won鈥檛 just be my Nelson staff that have that on their mind.鈥
Chambers said Fleming was formally recognised 鈥 alongside the 34 other officers killed in a criminal act 鈥 on Police Remembrance Day in September.
鈥淭hat will be something that we do every year as well.
鈥淏ut a service for Lyn [on the anniversary] 鈥 we鈥檒l work with her family and decide how they would like us to help recognise Lyn.鈥
Chambers has kept in contact with Fleming鈥檚 family throughout the year. He has also spent time with Ramsay.
鈥淚鈥檒l see him when I鈥檓 down there. I鈥檝e seen him a number of times during this year 鈥 he鈥檚 doing remarkably well,鈥 he said.

Commissioner Richard Chambers and Bryn Fleming at his wife's funeral in Nelson. Photo / George Heard
鈥淚鈥檝e also seen Lyn鈥檚 son and daughter a number of times during the year, and also her husband, Bryn. I鈥檝e touched base with them and spent some time with each of them.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been important for me to continue to acknowledge how hard the year鈥檚 been for them.鈥
Chambers said he was extremely proud of the police in Nelson 鈥 especially those who were the closest to Fleming.
鈥淚鈥檓 very proud of how they鈥檝e come together and supported each other 鈥 and I know that it鈥檚 been tough for a lot of them during the year.
鈥淎nd there are people who have thought about whether policing is for them. But they have looked after each other and they are all doing remarkably.

A powerful police haka was performed at Fleming's funeral. Photo / George Heard
He would always be proud of his mate Fleming 鈥 her contribution to policing and her dedication to the people in and behind the blue uniform.
鈥淟yn was a remarkable policewoman who many, many police officers over the years have looked up to,鈥 he said.
鈥淪he was a mentor to many in their careers. She was a person who dealt with the really hard stuff and did so incredibly well.
鈥淢y enduring memory of Lyn is a policewoman that the entire country can be proud of. She was such a bright soul who made the tough stuff a little bit easier to manage because she was such a supporting leader.
鈥淎nd, I know that my experience with Lyn is no different to many hundreds of others who have come across her in their careers.鈥

The funeral for Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming, who was killed in the line of duty on New Years Day, 2025. Photo / George Heard
Anna Leask is a senior journalist who covers national crime and justice. She joined the Herald in 2008 and has worked as a journalist for 20 years with a particular focus on family and gender-based violence, child abuse, sexual violence, homicides, mental health and youth crime. She writes, hosts and produces the award-winning podcast A Moment In Crime, released monthly on nzherald.co.nz
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