Christmas was cancelled for one Bay of Plenty family who couldn’t face celebrating without their cherished little girl.
Sakura Hall, 2, died on May 22 after the car she was in collided with a parked rubbish truck on Dansey Rd, near Ngongotahā.

Sakura Hall, 2, died on May 22, 2025, after the car she was a passenger in hit a stationary rubbish truck. Photo / Supplied
Christmas was cancelled for one Bay of Plenty family who couldn’t face celebrating without their cherished little girl.
Sakura Hall, 2, died on May 22 after the car she was in collided with a parked rubbish truck on Dansey Rd, near Ngongotahā.
Her uncle, Jesse Tamm, is reminding drivers taking to the roads this summer to make wise choices because their life or someone else’s could depend on it.
“Losing Sakura has shattered our family in a way I never thought possible. She wasn’t just a name or a statistic — she was a bright, loving little soul who brought laughter, warmth and light wherever she went."
Sakura is one of 33 people who died on Bay of Plenty roads in 2025.

She was a passenger in a car that was allegedly driven by a man who now faces a charge of drugged driving, causing her death.
The man, who has been granted interim name suppression, has appeared in the Rotorua District Court and pleaded not guilty to the charge. He is back before the court in March.
Tamm said it hurt every time he thought of Sakura, and his family now had to learn to live with a space that could never be filled.
He said Sakura’s family did not celebrate Christmas the way families were meant to.
“Christmas is meant to be about joy and togetherness, but instead it was marked by grief and heartbreak.”
He asked drivers to think of Sakura during these holidays.
“If sharing Sakura’s story makes even one person think twice on the road, then her loss might help spare another family from feeling this same pain.”
Official figures show there were five fewer deaths in 2025 compared with 2024.
There are four police regions that make up the Bay of Plenty police district, and in 2025, Taupō had the most deaths on the roads with 12.
There were eight deaths in the Rotorua region, eight in the Eastern Bay of Plenty and five in the Western Bay of Plenty.
In total there were 33 deaths in the Bay of Plenty compared with 37 in 2024.
Region - 2025 - 2024 - 2023 - 2022 - 2021 - 2020
Taupō - 12 - 12 - 12 - 21 - 9 - 12
Rotorua - 8 - 12 - 9 - 8 - 7 - 4
Western Bay - 5 - 7 - 9 - 15 - 15 - 17
Eastern Bay - 8 - 6 - 6 - 16 - 10 - 6
Bay of Plenty (total) - 33 - 37 - 36 - 60 - 41 - 39
Bay of Plenty District Road Policing Manager Inspector Phil Gillbanks said the leading cause of death and serious injury on Bay of Plenty roads was vehicles crossing the centre line, or leaving the road.
“Sadly, these crashes often result in harming innocent motorists. We have seen an increase in Bay of Plenty drivers who have illicit drugs in their system, involved in fatal crashes.”

He said alcohol and illicit drug use caused poor decision-making and poor reactive response tendencies. Fatigue can also contribute, he said.
“Driving impaired and speeding are common factors in crashes. In addition to these two factors, we also see a lack of seat belts being worn in crashes involving death and serious injury.”
Gillbanks said the Bay of Plenty’s scenic country attracted an increasing number of tourists.
“New Zealand’s roads are often divided by a single painted line, and some are windy, narrow, gravel roads leading to remote scenic spots. We ask that all drivers, and especially tourists, pay attention to staying safely on the correct side of the road.”
Police can withhold publicly releasing names of those who have died if there are court, coronial or family restrictions.
Kelly Makiha is a senior journalist who has reported for the Rotorua Daily Post for more than 25 years, covering mainly police, court, human interest and social issues.