Casefile True Crime - Casefile Archive 7: Nicky Fleming
Episode Date: February 21, 2026*** Content Warning: Crime against a child ***In 1998, the Easter holiday in Victoria, Australia, got off to a tragic beginning when 12-year-old Nicky Fleming was killed in a car accident while travel...ling to a family camping trip. But what initially looked like a single vehicle tragedy turned out to be a crime. And whoever had hit the Fleming family’s car had fled the scene…---Casefile Archives is a series of special bonus releases revisiting the earliest years of the show. The re-run episodes have been completely edited, polished, re-recorded and freshly produced from start to finish to match our current production standards. They are not complete rewrites - our goal wasn’t to alter the cases or reshape the writing, but to preserve the original storytelling while giving the production the refinement it didn’t have when we started the show back in 2016. Where appropriate, updates have been added, but the core structure and storytelling remain faithful to the originals. Because of this, these re-releases may sound a little different to our recent episodes, but they allow us to bring some of the earliest episodes up to the technical quality listeners expect today.---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Anonymous HostProduction & music – Mike MigasMusic - Andrew D.B. JoslynAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/casefile-archive-7-nicky-fleming Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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On the night of Thursday, April 8, 1998, Luke Nolan and his partner Angela were driving along
the Hume Highway, one of Australia's major interstate roadways.
The Hume stretches for 840 kilometres between the capital cities of Melbourne and Sydney,
with the dozens of exits and interchanges dotted throughout.
Luke and Angela were heading to the New South Wales border city of Aubrey for the east of
break. As they travelled north on a quiet and remote stretch of the highway between the Victorian
towns of Uroa and Benalla, the couple encountered something that made them markedly uneasy.
A large red freight truck with a white semi-trailer was weaving in a snake-like way across
the northbound road's double lanes. Luke and Angela suspected the truck's driver was either
drowsy or on something.
Wanting to get a safe distance away, Luke moved into the right lane to overtake the truck.
Just as he drew near, the truck veered over into his lane.
Luke hit the brakes and pulled back.
When the truck was back in the left lane, Luke tried once more to overtake, but it swerved again.
It took Luke three more attempts before he was finally able to overtake the dangerous truck.
and it gradually became a distant speck in his rearview mirror.
A short time later, at 12.15 a.m. on Friday, April 9,
Victoria Police's major collision investigation unit were alerted to an incident on the Hume Highway near Violet Town,
the halfway point between Uroa and Benalla.
The request for the major collision squad's presence highlighted the seriousness of the matter,
as they were only ever summoned to vehicular incidents that resulted in life-threatening injury.
The team immediately left their office in Melbourne and headed up the Hume Highway,
where the densely populated cityscape soon gave way to long stretches of agricultural fields,
rolling hillsides and thickets of trees.
The highway consisted of four lanes, two in each direction,
with a large, grassy median strip between them.
Even with their lights on and sirens blaring, it took the major collision team two hours to reach the remote location where the incident had occurred.
They could easily tell when they were drawing close to the site as an uncharacteristically long traffic jam had formed despite the early hour.
The Hume was particularly busy that night as travellers drove to or from regional Victoria for the Easter break.
Police further ahead were directing cars to turn off the highway at an exit before Violet Town,
but the detour was slow moving.
The major collision team veered onto the gravel that bordered the road
and slowly drove past the bumper-to-bumper traffic
until they spotted the incident site artificially lit up in the distance.
They parked well clear of the debris and walked the rest of the way.
By now it was 3 a.m. and icy.
cold. The surrounding countryside was still blanketed in pitch-black darkness.
As the major collision team approached the scene, they realised the incident involved a
Mazda Bravo four-wheel drive that had been towing a caravan. The two vehicles had separated
and rolled in different directions. The caravan had come to rest upright on the median strip
in the middle of the highway. A rectangular section had been
torn cleanly from the back right-hand panel, leaving a gaping hole that exposed a tartan mattress within.
The Mazda had landed upside down on the other side of the highway.
Several items had tumbled out of the vehicle as it rolled, including a coloring book,
pencils, children's slippers, various toys, and empty fast food cups.
Pratruiting from a shattered window was a small pair of blood-streaked feet.
They belonged to a young boy who was lying face down on the roof inside, clearly deceased.
One of his hands still grasped an Easter egg wrapped in gold foil that he had been holding at the time of the collision.
The child was identified as 12-year-old Nikki Fleming.
He had sustained severe head injuries as well as fractured ribs and a broken leg and collarbone.
Nicky had been travelling with his father, who was behind the wheel, as well as his brother and sister.
They had been rushed to hospital by the time the major collision team had arrived.
Their injuries varied in severity, though all miraculously survived.
Ian Fleming, Nicky's 45-year-old father, had a broken arm, a lacerated forehead and a deep cut across his nose.
His oldest 13-year-old son suffered a fractured skull.
Ian's 8-year-old daughter was being treated for minor cuts and grazers.
While recovering in hospital, Ian Fleming was able to recall the lead-up to the collision.
He had left his home on the seaside Mornington Peninsula Shire, southeast of Melbourne,
at 5.30pm on Thursday, April 9.
He and his children were going on their...
annual Easter camping trip in the northeastern Victorian town of Bright, more than four hours away.
The children's mother had decided she wanted to do other things that weekend, so it was just
Ian and their kids. After packing the caravan, Ian drove north until he reached the Hume Highway.
Shortly before 11pm, Ian noticed his petrol tank was running low.
Bright was still over an hour and a half away, so Ian had to stop somewhere to refuel.
He saw a sign up ahead for Violet Town and safely reduced his speed to take the turn off.
Just before the exit, Ian was startled by a loud bang.
Ian's body immediately jolted forward with such intensity that it left him feeling dazed.
Within seconds, his car veered out of control.
Ian's mind raced as he tried to understand what had happened. He thought he must have blown a tire
or the car was malfunctioning in some other way. He desperately tried to regain control, but the car
seemed to have a will of its own. It mounted the median strip and flipped before rolling over
and over for what seemed like forever. When the car eventually came to a stop on its roof,
Ian could hear his daughter whimpering, and he called out asking if she was all right.
Ian removed his seatbelt and fell to the roof.
His daughter did the same, as did his eldest son.
Twelve-year-old Nikki didn't move.
Ian managed to escape the wreck.
Broken glass coated the road.
The roof inside the car was stained with blood.
Ian dragged his children out one by one.
The two older children were hurt but conscious.
Nikki wasn't responding to his father at all.
He had died on impact.
Ian had no idea what had happened.
When first responders arrived, they initially thought the incident was a single vehicle collision
as there were no other impacted vehicles or victims in the vicinity.
It wasn't until they spoke with witnesses an hour after the crash that they learned a large red freight truck with a white semi-trailer was responsible.
It had been sighted driving erratically along the hume, drifting between lanes and almost hitting other motorists in the lead-up to the crash.
There was no clear explanation for the truck's reckless driving.
It had been a clear night with perfect conditions.
The incident occurred on a straight stretch of road in the middle of empty fields.
Ian Fleming hadn't noticed the truck at all as it carelessly barreled up behind him.
What happened next was described as every highway user's worst nightmare.
The wayward truck clipped the rear of the Fleming's caravan, which caused the Mazda in front to go wildly astray.
There was little Ian Fleming could do to prevent what.
what happened next. The caravan was hit on its right-hand side, causing it to veer violently to the left.
This made the Mazda jackknife to the right toward the median strip.
The caravan was wrenched free and slid across the road on its side before somehow riding itself
and coming to rest on the median strip. It had a few minor, dense and scratches,
and the rear right panel had been cleanly torn off by an eye bolt on the front of the truck.
Otherwise, the caravan was in remarkably good condition.
The same couldn't be said for the Mazda.
The truck driver had swerved to the right to avoid the caravan as it swung violently.
This caused the truck to collide with the driver's side of the Fleming's Mazda
and hit it again when the car rotated.
The car was sent into a high-velocity roll that left a perfect impression of its side in the bitumen.
It rolled three times before its crushed wreckage finally came to rest 105 metres down the road.
A collision squad reconstruction expert calculated that the truck, which was carrying upwards of 40 tonnes,
had been exceeding the speed limit at 106 kilometres per hour, before the driver slammed the
brakes 10 to 20 metres behind the caravan. It was too little, too late. The Mazda had slowed down
to 88 kilometres per hour in preparation for taking the exit to Violet Town. The truck driver had
failed to react sooner, causing the fatal and devastating crash. It was speculated that the driver
had been tailgating the Mazda, following too closely and not leaving.
a safe distance between them.
Ian Fleming's field of vision was obscured by the caravan, so he wasn't aware of the danger
right behind him.
The truck disappeared in a cloud of dust immediately after the collision.
No one caught a glimpse of the driver and none of the witnesses followed in pursuit,
as they had pulled over and assumed the truck would do the same.
This categorised the incident as a hit and run.
A criminal offence.
Police established a roadblock further north where the Hume Highway crossed over into New South Wales,
hoping to intercept the fleeing truck there.
But it didn't appear.
The morning sun revealed the full scope of the crime scene.
Investigators likened it to a bomb site.
An aerial view of the crash showed debris strewn 400 metres up the highway.
Black skid marks left by the missing truck showed how it had swerved around the debris and onto the gravel along the shoulder of the road before regaining control and fleeing the scene.
Double-tracked tyre tracks arched across both northbound lanes of the highway and continued on to the median strip.
This meant the truck travelled for some metres on the grass after the collision, perhaps giving the driver enough time to slow down and veer.
left to take the Violet Town exit. If not, they must have continued straight up the highway
and taken another exit further ahead. By the time the major collision investigation unit were
beginning their search for the truck, it already had a near four-hour head start. There were
multiple routes it could have taken in every direction. By daybreak, it might have already been many
hundreds of kilometers away. The section of road where the fatal crash occurred remained blocked
over the busy Easter weekend. With such a large-scale crime scene on a busy interstate highway,
part of the challenge was sorting out which pieces of debris belonged to it and which didn't.
All up, it took investigators more than 12 hours to collect evidence and document the crime scene,
double the time it usually takes.
All sorts of unrelated vehicle components were found amongst the wreckage
until a major collision team member stumbled upon an accident investigator's version of a jackpot,
some small pieces of amber glass from a broken indicator light.
Most significantly, one of the pieces had a serial number on it.
Investigators contacted the makers of the glass,
a company called Heller Australia and provided the serial number.
Heller's records revealed they had fitted that same kind of light to various boats and cars,
as well as many trucks over the years,
though they couldn't pinpoint which exact vehicle the glass from the crime scene had originated from.
Looking closely at the back right-hand panel torn from the caravan,
investigators noticed a rectangular indentation imprinted on the elevation.
aluminum. It looked like an inverted V, or perhaps, the top of an A.
Investigators thought it might be the impression of a number plate. At this early juncture,
the police had few details to go on. All they knew was that they were looking for a red freight
truck with a white semi-trailer, a broken amber indicator light, and possibly a license plate
that featured the letter V or A.
Ian Fleming appealed to the hit-run driver from his hospital bed.
He was in shock over losing Nicky,
whom he described as a beautiful child and much-loved son and brother,
with a wide range of interests including softball, drama, and jazz ballet.
When Ian first learnt that the person responsible for Nicky's death had fled the scene,
he was furious.
Since then, he'd come to understand that the driver,
panicked and made a spur of the moment decision to leave.
Ian remained hopeful they would do the right thing.
He begged the unknown driver.
I'd like him now to think about what he's done and honour himself.
And step forward, please.
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Investigators were aware that it wasn't unusual for hit-run offenders to give themselves up in the day's following crashes.
Sometimes they needed to come to grips with what had happened, or sober up from stimulants they had taken.
Hit-run offenders almost always told someone what they'd done.
If not, the damage to their vehicle raised questions and they'd be dobed in.
The police knew in this circumstance that there was no way the truck driver hadn't realized the damage they'd caused, as a spokesperson stated.
It is obvious to us the driver knew he had been in a very serious collision and he showed considerable skill to get back on the road.
A 12-year-old boy deserves more than to be left.
left by the side of the Hume Highway for dead.
Truckers shared news of Nikki Fleming's death over their vehicle's CB radios,
calling the person responsible a mongrel.
They urged him to come forward and stop giving them all a bad rap.
Rival truck drivers accused each other of being responsible.
Crime Stoppers also received a deluge of tip-offs from individuals with personal vendettas
against particular truckies.
From former partners to neighbours who were sick of seeing rigs parked in their street.
Investigators followed up each lead and interviewed many drivers, ruling them out one by one.
As time wore on, it became clear that Ian Fleming's impassioned plea had fallen on deaf ears.
With no one coming forward to claim responsibility, detectives were facing the worst-case scenario.
The driver seemingly hadn't told a soul, and the damage to their truck had either gone unnoticed
or was discreetly repaired before it raised any questions.
Investigators suspected they were looking for an owner driver rather than a company driver,
as the collision damage would be easier to hide if the truckie wasn't answerable to anyone.
Back at their Melbourne office, the major collision investigation unit got back to work,
Not being trucking experts, they were about to take a steep learning curve.
If the truck driver was heading north along the Hume Highway just before Easter, he had to be going
home because most truck depots would be closed over the long weekend.
It was unlikely he would sit outside a closed depot and wait four days for them to open again.
Inquiries at the State Motor Registration Board revealed that there were 100,000,
160,000 trucks registered on Australian roads.
Finding the one responsible was going to be a massive undertaking.
In the meantime, forensic analysts examined the evidence from the crime scene.
The truck had left smears of red paint on the Mazdo End caravan.
Under a microscope, the paint was shown to have an iron-based undercoat with an epoxy primer and a top coat.
The top coat was made from an normal.
organic red pigment.
Most people see a red car or truck but can't differentiate between different shades and
colour bases.
This was purpleish red.
Paint samples were requested from companies that had red branded trucks, including
Australia Post and Mac trucks, as well as from the paint manufacturers themselves.
None matched the paint from the collision.
A gantry on the New South Wales border.
photographed all trucks that crossed from Victoria.
30 kilometres further up the road,
the trucks were photographed again
and their speed was calculated from the time between the photos.
Infringement notices were issued to truckies who were found to be speeding.
50 black and white photos of trucks were taken in the period
between 10.30pm on April 9 and 6am on April 10.
None of the vehicles featured damage consistent with the collision.
When the Mazda Bravo and the caravan were forensically examined,
photographs of the damage were sent to the major collision investigation unit.
They arranged to get a blown-up picture of the caravan's rear right-hand panel
where the truck had made initial contact.
Upon studying the images closely,
investigators deduced the letter V or A impressions,
were the wrong size to be lettering from a license plate.
The shapes had to have been made by something on the front of the truck's bull bar.
They could now see there was a rectangular shape with the inverted V, as well as some circles and a rectangular tear.
Trucks had all sorts of signage on their fronts.
Investigators knew if they could identify what imagery caused the strange impression,
they might be able to identify the truck.
However, by the eighth week of the investigation, the case had stalled.
After a massive interstate search, all possible leads had reached dead ends.
By now, Nikki Fleming had been laid to rest in a moving service attended by 350 family members and friends.
Despite the outpouring of love and grief, the culprit continued to show no remit.
Morse by refusing to come forward. No one was more invested in finding the person responsible than
senior constable Karsten Schulz of the Major Collision Investigation Unit. The case preoccupied his mind at all
times and he agonised over the evidence, trying to uncover something they had missed. He even bought
every trucking magazine he could find in the hopes they featured an image of the truck they were
desperately looking for. Having a son of his own only amplified Constable Schultz's drive to
find Nicky Fleming's killer. Constable Schultz worked the case full-time. After one shift,
he drove to a local industrial estate where several trucking yards were located. He drove by each site
before coming across a red truck parked up the road. What caught his eye were two small canvas covers
on the left and right-hand sides of the bull bar under the headlights.
The insignia on the covers was a big white W with a red star in the middle.
It was the logo for Western Star, an international truck manufacturer.
Schultz had examined pictures of the Fleming's caravan panel thousands of times,
and all of a sudden, it clicked.
The inverted V was in fact the centre of a W.
The truck at the centre of the collision was a Western Star.
Heller Australia, the company that fitted the truck's amber glass indicator light,
had a contract with Western Star.
Finally, the case was moving forward.
Constable Schultz got out of his car to take a closer look at the red truck.
It showed no sign of damage or repair consistent with the Violet Town collision.
The truck's driver was nevertheless,
tracked down and ruled out.
Constable Schultz had found the right type of truck, just not the one he was looking for.
The major collision team could now further narrow down their search by finding out which
Western Star trucks were fitted with the model of Heller Light fragments found at the crime scene.
Records indicated that 1,732 trucks built since 1993 had the Heller Amber Light.
As it turned out, the measurements of the indentations left by the truck's bull bar weren't standard.
The vertical sections were 75mm wide, while most vertical uprights on bull bars were between 90 and 100
millimeters wide.
There were only a few manufacturers who made 75mm uprights.
One of them was King bars in Queensland.
Star trucks were manufactured in Queensland, so it stood to reason that King bars might be their
supplier of choice. According to King Bar's manager, only one bull bar fit the measurements of the
suspect truck, a 4964F heavy-duty road train bar. A wooden mock-up made to the King Bar's
specifications was placed against the Fleming's caravan panel. It fit like a glove.
Same with the Mazda panel.
The King Bar's manager sent his receipt books to Melbourne.
His records revealed that 679 Western Star trucks had the heavy-duty road train bullbar.
Of these, 206 were fitted with the Bull Bar and the Western Star canvas covers.
For an investigation that had begun with 160,000 possible trucks, police were.
now down to 206. Each of these trucks had to be located and checked. This proved difficult as the
trucks travelled the entire country. A four-page questionnaire was distributed to police and was to be
filled out each time a Western Star truck was pulled over, listing make, model, colour, and most
importantly, any damage to its exterior. This meant the hit-run driver would have every traffic
cop looking for him. The plan also compelled every innocent truck driver to be on the lookout for
the culprit in order to take the heat off them. Forensic officer Ted Kennedy Ripon had been
assisting detectives with the case, but in mid-September he temporarily stepped away to go on personal leave.
During his break, Ted and his family holidayed with his in-laws in the northern Victorian town of Ochuca.
At around lunchtime on Saturday, September 12, Ted and his father-in-law went for a drive
and pulled into a service station to get some petrol.
When Ted exited the car, he noticed a red truck parked on the other side of the station.
As his father-in-law filled the tank, Ted walked over to the truck for a better look.
With no sign of the truck's driver, Ted approached cautiously from the side.
The vehicle's big silver logo caught his eye. It read, Western Star.
Right sort of truck, Ted thought.
After examining paint samples for months, he also knew it was exactly the right purpleish-red
color. Ted looked at the bull bar to see if there was any signs of damage. It was then that he
spotted a crack in the bottom rung on the right-hand side, consistent with the Violet Town collision.
He also saw a damaged indicator light that someone had tried to repair. The truck had
Western Star canvas covers on the front, and the eye bolt was in the correct position to have made the tear in the caravan
panel. With growing excitement, Ted realized his stroke of luck. He walked around the truck to see if there
was any damage to the paintwork and found a scrape the size of a Tencent coin close to the heller light.
Everything was consistent with Violet Town. As Ted leaned in to inspect the scraped paintwork,
the truck driver stepped down from the truck's cabin. Ted hadn't noticed him to
there, and nilly jumped out of his skin.
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When Ted Kennedy Rippen came face to face with the truck driver,
who could be the man they'd been hunting for six months,
the first thing he thought to say was,
How bigs your engine?
Playing it cool, Ted pretended he was a trucking enthusiast.
The truck driver's initial suspicion relaxed as the two men started talking trucks.
Do you own it? Ted asked.
The driver replied nonchalantly with a laugh.
Nah, the bank owns it.
This meant he was an owner-driver, just the type investigators suspected was response to
responsible for the hit and run. Ted returned to his father-in-law and wrote down the truck's
details. He then contacted the major collision investigation unit and provided a detailed description
of the truck. What Ted didn't know was that an officer in Victoria had pulled over the
same truck three days earlier and filled out the questionnaire provided by case investigators.
The driver's name was Brett Kilmore. He was from Queensland.
and was a 30-year-old father of two.
Two hits on Kilmore's truck in five days pushed it to the top of the investigation.
Investigators worked to determine if they could place Brett Kilmore on the Hume Highway
on the night of Thursday, April 8, 1998.
They checked Kilmore's mobile phone records and discovered that his device had been
traveling north along the Hume Highway that very night.
At 10.09 p.m., he placed a call near the town of Nagambi.
Violet Town was a further 60 kilometres away.
Travel timings aligned for him to have been involved in the collision.
Kilmore's mobile had no further activity until 1.49 the following morning,
almost two hours after the crash.
Call towers pinpointed his location around the regional city of Sheperton,
less than an hour's drive northwest of Violet Town,
indicating that Kilmore exited the Hume shortly after Violet Town
and continued along the Newell Highway.
This was not a typical route truck drivers used when travelling north
and explained why Kilmore went unnoticed after the crash.
This data also showed that Kilmore had stopped his truck for quite some time
in the middle of the night before continuing on.
It turned out, Brett Kilmore was the focus of three other investigations
pertaining to car collisions that took place after Violet Town.
Two occurred in South Australia and another was in New South Wales.
In fact, at the time investigators were honing in on Kilmore,
his red Western Star truck was in for repairs.
If damage on the truck was being repaired,
then possible evidence from the Violet Town collision
could be lost.
It was imperative that the truck be impounded and forensically examined without delay.
Members of the Major Collision Investigation Unit travelled to Queensland and immediately swooped
on Brett Kilmore's truck.
Inside, investigators found a strange device wired to the engine and hidden in a compartment
in the sleeper cabin.
Known as a whizzer, this was used to override speed limiters on trucks.
Prior to the Violet Town crash, the offending truck was travelling at 106 kilometres per hour.
Western Star Trucks were speed limited to 100 kilometres per hour.
That meant the suspect used a device to override the speed limiter, and here it was.
There were three huge round fuel tanks on the right-hand side of Kilmore's truck under the driver's door.
One of the fuel tanks had a huge dent in it, but had been turned around so the dent faced inwards and couldn't be seen.
This was definite evidence of Violet Town.
The cracked bullbar was also consistent with the crime scene.
Furthermore, a tiny patch of canvas found embedded into a screw from the caravan's rear-right panel was a perfect match for the hole in the Western Star Road train cover.
On Tuesday, October 7, 1998, almost six months to the day since the Violet Town Collision,
a tall lanky man walked into a Nala police station in Queensland.
It was Brett Kilmore.
He explained that a New South Wales police officer had asked him to report to the station
in regards to a collision he'd been involved in.
Victoria's major collision team was waiting at the back of the station.
Kilmore's arrival had been a trap they'd arranged with their interstate colleagues.
After being informed that Kilmore was present, they ushered him into an interview room.
Kilmore didn't appear nervous until the officers introduced themselves.
We're from the Victoria Police and we would like to ask you some questions about a collision at Violet Town on April 9 this year.
Kilmore was immediately rattled and replied,
What Victorian collision?
I thought I was here about a New South Wales collision.
Then Kilmore began to shake.
After a moment of anxious silence, he asked,
Should I ring a solicitor?
Investigators told Kilmore that it was up to him,
but cautioned that anything he said would be used as evidence.
Kilmore stared at the floor before announcing,
I've been waiting for you blokes to come around for six months.
With that, the floodgates opened.
Kilmore denied driving erratically that night,
but admitted to taking no-dose,
caffeine tablets that can restore mental alertness and wakefulness in moments of fatigue.
Despite knowing that driving while fatigued,
was dangerous, Kilmore blamed the pressures placed on truck drivers, especially owner-operators.
He said he often drove for excessive hours to make ends meet as he had once been sacked for running late.
Kilmore said that he hadn't seen the Fleming's caravan until it was too late to avoid it.
He tried to blame bright lights on a vehicle behind his truck for distracting him, but this didn't add up.
Investigators had interviewed multiple witnesses and none reported seeing a car with bright lights or high beams behind the truck.
Kilmore admitted that he had collided with the Fleming's caravan and car.
He then veered off the Violet Town exit before stopping up the road.
From there, he could see cars on the Hume Highway screeching to a halt in the aftermath of the collision.
Kilmore claimed to have seen other cars navigate around the crash and keep driving,
which led him to believe it mustn't have been that serious.
A mix of fear and panic propelled him to drive on and not go back.
A week later, Kilmore paid a repairer in Queensland $100 to fix his damaged bullbar.
Checking Kilmore's mobile phone records for the week after,
Violet Town, investigators rang every number with the Queensland prefix 07.
Eventually, they located the repairman.
The major collision detective introduced himself over the phone and said,
I'm making inquiries about a hit run in Victoria where a young child was killed.
I believe you may have repaired a truck that was involved in the collision.
There was a pause at the other end of the line.
phone before the man replied,
You're not going to tell me that the bloke who came in here killed that kid at Violet Town.
I had a feeling about that bloke. I even told my mate in the factory next door that it might be him.
The repairer's voice shook as he spoke. It was clear he was upset that he hadn't trusted
his instincts and contacted authorities earlier on. There was nothing that could be done to prove or
disprove whether Kilmore had taken any illegal substances in the lead-up to the collision.
Investigators suspected Kilmore had deliberately collided with the other vehicles in the six
months after the event. This would give him a legitimate reason for claiming repairs to his truck
while concealing the damage that occurred outside Violet Town. Brett Kilmore faced 10 charges,
including culpable driving, failing to stop at an accident,
failing to render assistance and a string of other offences relating to the injuries to the Fleming family.
He made no formal plea and faced trial in March 2000, nearly two years after the devastating collision.
Kilmore maintained that it was a horrific accident and not gross negligence.
After two days of deliberation, the jury returned a guilty verdict on all counts.
Brett Kilmore was impassive as the judge read out his sentence of five years in prison with a three-year minimum sentence.
Nikki's mother was angry that the three-year suspension of Kilmore's driver's license would coincide with his prison sentence
instead of being instituted following his release.
Relatives and friends met to celebrate what would have been Nikki Fleming's 14th birthday the same week Brett Kilmore was found guilty.
In a victim impact statement, Nikki's brother told the court that he had lost his brother
and his best friend in the collision. Nicky's mother said both of her surviving children were
traumatized by what had happened. Outside the court, she told reporters of her pain.
Every day I don't have my son. Every day I have that loss. When asked about Brett Kilmore,
she simply said.
I hope that every day he's in jail, he thinks about driving carefully when he comes out.
Following the closing of the case, Ted Kennedy Rippen, who had stumbled upon Brett Kilmore's
truck, received commendations from the Chief Commissioner of Police.
For a long time thereafter, he was known as Truck Stop Ted.
Senior Constable Karst & Schultz of Victoria Police's major collision investigation
unit spoke out about why he and his team were so dogged in their pursuit of the Violet Town
offender. He said, it's an affront that somebody could just not come forward. It goes against
honour and standing up for yourself and taking responsibility for what you did. You have to be
held accountable.
