PIEDMONT’S NORMALLY JOYFUL annual Turkey Trot began Thursday morning as a memorial for three young people who died in a car crash Wednesday.

“A longstanding and beloved tradition benefitting local youth athletics, this year’s Turkey Trot will take on new meaning as an opportunity to connect, comfort one another, and mourn as a community during this sorrowful time,” said Piedmont city spokesperson Echa Schneider in a statement Wednesday.

Three former Piedmont High students from the Class of 2023 died and another person was injured when the Tesla Cybertruck they were in crashed and caught fire early Wednesday morning, according to Piedmont Exedra.

The vehicle hit a curb and then a retaining wall around 3 a.m., wedging up against a tree on Hampton Road between Sea View and King avenues

The deaths sent waves of grief through the close-knit community, with hundreds of people lining up and leaving flowers at the scene of the crash in a makeshift but poignant memorial.

A pile of flowers surrounds the base of a tree on Hampton Road in Piedmont during the annual Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving Day. Three former Piedmont High athletes were killed Wednesday night when the Cybertruck they were riding in struck the tree. (Kat Rowlands/Bay City News)

Bouquets surrounded the tree struck by the Tesla that officers and firefighters arrived to find in flames. First responders learned that someone who saw the crash was able to pull one of the four occupants out, though the other three people in the Cybertruck died. The person who survived was taken to a hospital with serious injuries but was in stable condition, Piedmont Police Capt. Chris Monahan said.

Police Chief Jeremy Bowers said investigators are looking into the possibility that the person who pulled the survivor out of the Cybertruck had left the same gathering prior to the crash.

A somber holiday

Thursday’s Turkey Trot still commenced, but not without crying, hugs and somber faces. Piedmont Mayor Jen Cavenaugh opened the event with brief memorial remarks and then led the community in a moment of silence.

“We’re going to get through this together in community,” said Cavenaugh. “And I know that when we’re feeling helpless, the one thing we can do is reach out to help others. When we’re feeling sad, the one thing we can do is reach out to connect to a friend, because chances are they’re feeling the same way you are.”

Indeed, Bowers said at a briefing Wednesday that Piedmont is “a very tight-knit community. This is a community that’s going to rally around members that are affected by this tragedy.”

Mourners share hugs and tears at a Nov. 28, 2024, memorial for three victims of a truck crash in Piedmont. (Illustration by Glenn Gehlke/Local News Matters. Photo by Kat Rowlands/Bay City News)

Runners and walkers on Thursday were able to alter their route in order to pay respects at the memorial tree and honor the victims.

The cause of the crash is still under investigation, but Bowers said it’s “safe to say that speed was a factor” in the crash, though other possible factors have yet to be determined.

The Alameda County Coroner’s Office on Thursday said that the names of the three people who died in the crash are not yet being released but may be available next week.

Katy St. Clair got her start in journalism by working in the classifieds department at the East Bay Express during the height of alt weeklies, then sweet talked her way into becoming staff writer, submissions editor, and music editor. She has been a columnist in the East Bay Express, SF Weekly, and the San Francisco Examiner. Starting in 2015, she begrudgingly scaled the inverted pyramid at dailies such as the Vallejo Times-Herald, The Vacaville Reporter, and the Daily Republic. She has her own independent news site and blog that covers the delightfully dysfunctional town of Vallejo, California, where she also collaborates with the investigative team at Open Vallejo. A passionate advocate for people with developmental disabilities, she serves on both the Board of the Arc of Solano and the Arc of California. She lives in Vallejo.