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TRAGEDY: ‘America’s Got Talent’ Cheerleader, Emily Gold, 17, Dies by Suicide Just Weeks After Earning a….see more
Emily Gold had wowed the nation alongside the Los Osos High School dance team on ‘America’s Got Talent’ in August. Los Osos High School dancer and America’s Got Talent contestant Emily Gold, 17, has died. On Friday, Sept. 13, Gold was found dead by suicide at 11:52 pm, the San Bernardino Coroner’s Office confirms to PEOPLE.
In a statement shared with PEOPLE, California Highway Patrol Public Information Officer Rodrigo Jimenez said that “officers from the California Highway Patrol Rancho Cucamonga area responded to a pedestrian down in lanes.”
“When the officers arrived, they located a female, 17 year old, who was struck by at least one other vehicle in the carpool lane on eastbound 210,” Jimenez said. “The female did succumb to her injuries and was pronounced deceased at the scene.” Police have asked anybody who saw what happened or has additional information to contact their investigator, Officer S. Gonzalez.
PEOPLE has reached out to Rancho Cucamonga Police Department as well as representatives for America’s Got Talent and Los Osos High School for comment.
Just last month, the Southern California teenager had wowed the nation alongside the Los Osos High School dance team on America’s Got Talent. After making it through auditions, the group landed in to the series’ quarterfinals before they were eliminated in August. Despite their elimination, judge Simon Cowell gave the team’s high energy performance a standing ovation.
“It was absolutely brilliant,” Cowell said at the time. “What I loved about this was first of all the energy. I think what I just saw is everything a great school should be doing, which is encouraging talent and friendship. ” Cowell continued, “It reminded me of seeing the High School Musical movie and thinking every kid should go to a school like that.”
Speaking with PEOPLE on August 13, Gold said of her time onstage, “When I’m performing, I’m really thinking about all the corrections because we get corrections up until five minutes before we go on stage. So to really just think about all those so that we apply them is my biggest priority on stage.” Asked how she was juggling being in high school with performing on AGT, she said, “it’s definitely tough to balance it all, but we make it happen.”