Friends of Lafayette’s Sienna Ranch were reeling Sunday night with the news that a popular local teacher had been killed during an apparent knife attack in Berkeley Friday.
Berkeley police have yet to officially identify the young woman found dead in an Ashby Avenue home but a notice issued by Sienna Ranch over the weekend confirmed that she was Emilie Inman, the school’s 5th-6th Middle School science instructor.
A UC Berkeley student wanted in connection with the homicide, as well as an apparently related stabbing that sent another young woman to the hospital, is reportedly in custody, according to police and news site Berkeleyside.
Pablo Gomez Jr. is seen in video shot during a recent protest at UC Berkeley
Police identified the wanted person as 22-year-old Pablo Gomez Jr. of North Hollywood, a gender neutral campus activist studying “Chicanx/Latinx Studies” according to Gomez Jr.’s Facebook page – the “x” usage employed to avoid gender identification. A friend who contacted Berkeleyside said Gomez Jr. uses the pronoun “they” and was a committed community activist.
Inman’s body was located at a house in the 2400 block of Ashby Avenue. It was located after a woman who said she had been stabbed at an unknown location earlier in the day somehow made it to the 2600 block of Ridge Road north of the UC Berkeley campus – flagging down a passing motorist for help.
Posts and contact from friends of the victims theorized that there was an initial violent contact between Gomez and the as-yet unidentified first victim with Gomez then traveling to the Ashby Avenue home to confront a second acquaintance who had moved out a year earlier.
Inman, who was reportedly studying inside when Gomez arrived, was reportedly stabbed at the front door of the residence. She apparently did not know her attacker.
Friends said Inman knew Gomez Jr., who posted about queer, transgender, and other issues such as police brutality and the media’s portrayal of minorities.
A short bio on Twitter reads “nonbinary, pan xicanx who loves dr pepper.” Gomez Jr. grew up in Los Angeles, attending Van Nuys High School.
While the relationship between Inman and Gomez Jr. remains a matter of investigation, the youthful teacher’s impact on the family-owned Sienna Ranch was not in doubt.
“The email said she’s dead,” one Orinda parent wrote Sunday. “I’m in shock. She taught SO MANY Lafayette kids… she taught my son.”
Sienna Ranch is a 21-acre ranch in Lafayette, its owners and team of teachers stressing environmental education and learning through art and discovery.
According to her staff profile, Inman adopted a similar focus while she attended UC Santa Cruz and has been working at Sienna Ranch since the beginning of the 2014-15 school year, also working part time at the Bay Area Center for Waldorf Teacher Training in El Sobrante.
A memorial service in Inman’s memory has been scheduled for Jan. 16 at Sienna Ranch, from 3 to 5 p.m.
Horrible
Seriously?
Unbelievably sad.
Why is it that the brightest lights are always taken too soon? This is terrible.
Tragic case. Condolences to her family and friends
This is so sad and tragic. Prayers…
So many questions to this story. At least there is a witness who can shed some light on why this happened.
Still trying to understand how this could happen.
Hearing that a lot, Maria… hoping to get some additional answers soon.
Very sad. Odd that the surviving victim was seeking help so far away, on the north side of campus, when she said she was attacked at a location about 2 blocks from Alta Bates hospital.
If we’re sticking with non specific genderless pronouns then “they” has got some explaining to do.
Just at the wrong place – her own home – at the wrong time? It defies all logic.
Wow. What a waste.
Breaks my heart.
“They” is pretty confused. Resolving your disaffection, your alienation, your aloneness in the world with murder, with furious hate, is not resolution at all. Not for anyone. The sadness of it simply defines you for all time as pathetic, by definition, pitifully inadequate.