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‘If I fall, I’m going to die’: Eight dead, at least 25 injured during crowd surge at Travis Scott’s Astroworld music festival

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Astroworld concert-goers describe chaos
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Officials were searching for answers after a Houston music festival ended in tragedy Friday night, when at least eight people — the youngest 14 — were killed as crowds surged toward a stage while hip-hop star Travis Scott performed. Scores more were injured as ambulances rushed in and the show continued on.

The disaster — the deadliest at an American concert since a 2017 mass shooting at a country music festival in Las Vegas — unfolded around 9:30 p.m. Friday during the performance of the headliner, Houston-born rapper Scott, who founded the Astroworld Festival in 2018.

The on-site investigator at the deadly 1979 Who concert said that festival seating and crowd density may have contributed to the Astroworld tragedy.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, speaking at a news conference Saturday, described “a tragedy on many different levels” and vowed that “this incident is being thoroughly investigated.” Turner, who said the seven people identified among the dead ranged in age from 14 to 27, said there were “a lot of unanswered questions” that could take weeks to investigate. An eighth person, who he said was male, is still unidentified.

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“It may well be that this tragedy is the result of unpredictable events, of circumstances coming together that couldn’t possibly have been avoided,” Judge Lina Hidalgo, the most senior elected official in Harris County, said at the news conference. “But until we determine that, I will ask the tough questions.”

Officials estimated about 50,000 people were attending the outdoor event at NRG Park when crowds began to “compress toward the front of the stage,” Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña said. “That caused some panic and it started causing some injuries.” Peña added that the festival was well below the 200,000 capacity allowed under the fire code.

Witnesses described a scene of confusion and havoc.

“It was like a ripple effect. One person pushed, and everyone went,” said Gerardo Abad Garcia, 25, of Denver, folding his arms in front of his chest to show how he was “compressed” like “a sardine in a can.”

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“There was like no airflow in there. It was just like primal instinct: I had to get out,” Garcia said.

Crowds outside the gate of the Astroworld Festival, part of which is a giant representation of Travis Scott's face
Fans outside the gate of the 2021 Astroworld Festival at NRG Park in Houston on Friday.
(Erika Goldring / WireImage)

About 30 minutes into his set, which was livestreamed on Apple Music, Scott noticed blue and red flashing lights on the festival floor and said, “There’s an ambulance in the crowd. Whoa, whoa, whoa.”

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After a minute’s pause, Scott announced, “Y’all know what you came to do,” the music started up again and the concert kept going.

Though officials said that the set “ended early in the interest of public safety,” Scott’s 25-song Astroworld performance continued for roughly 40 minutes more, concluding with the same two songs, “Sicko Mode” and “Goosebumps” that he finished with at New York’s Rolling Loud festival in October.

Houston Police Chief Troy Finner said police shut down the event as fast as they could.

At “9:30, right there, that’s when a few people started going down. Our people stepped up and immediately went to the producer and told him people are going down. This show ended at 10:10 p.m.,” Finner said.

“You cannot just close when you have 50,000 individuals that young. You can have rioting,” he said.

According to Mayor Turner, there were 528 police officers at the scene as well as 755 security guards provided by concert company Live Nation.

Twenty-five people were taken by ambulance to local hospitals, according to officials; of those, five were younger than 18. A 10-year-old was in critical condition. Officials said some victims suffered from cardiac arrest but that autopsies were still pending for the dead.

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Four survivors were discharged as of Saturday.

Officials said that at least one security guard fell unconscious and was treated with Narcan, which is used for opioid overdoses, after feeling a needle “prick” while responding to the crowd surge.

“He was revived and the medical staff did notice a prick that was similar to a prick you would get if somebody was trying to inject you,” Finner said. He added that, in addition to the homicide investigation, his department had launched a narcotics investigation.

Peña, the fire chief, said his workers administered Narcan to several people at the concert. Turner said officials were investigating whether multiple people had been attacked with needles, saying the city was “not taking anything off the table.”

Scott, who released a statement on Twitter, said he was “absolutely devastated by what took place last night. My prayers go out to the families and all those impacted by what happened at Astroworld Festival.” He said police had his “total support” in the investigation.

Live Nation said in a statement that it was “heartbroken for those lost and impacted at Astroworld last night. We will continue working to provide as much information and assistance as possible to the local authorities as they investigate the situation.”

Fans attend the Astroworld Festival on Friday.
Fans attend the Astroworld Festival in Houston on Friday.
(Omar Vega / FilmMagic )
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Organizers canceled the festival’s second day Saturday as families gathered at a local hotel to reunite with survivors. Groups of teens — many still wearing their festival wristbands and shirts — milled in the parking lot.

“I was really close to the front during it. We were all holding each other up,” said Christopher, 16, clutching Astroworld bags as he stood with his father, who asked that their last name not be used.

Wearing a Chicago Bulls jersey, he lifted a pair of battered sneakers he said had been stomped on as the crowd surged over him.

Travis Scott performs on day one of the Astroworld Festival at NRG Park in Houston on Friday.
Travis Scott performs at the Astroworld Festival at NRG Park in Houston on Friday.
(Amy Harris / Invision )

Denver entrepreneur Jesse Dahl flew to the Houston concert with his 9-year-old son, Christiano.

“There were a lot of young kids who didn’t know how to handle themselves,” he said. “You get teenagers with no rules or boundaries, it’s just wild all day.”

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Early on, before the show started, the energy level at the festival was high. At 2 p.m., a reporter for local station KTRK-TV witnessed people bursting through the gates of NRG Park.

Concertgoers described an event that had been unruly throughout the afternoon and evening.

Garcia said he had to get help from security when the crowd got similarly agitated and surged during a performance by rapper Don Toliver in another fenced area. He said a security guard lifted him over the fence to safety.

Garcia said he saw people jump fences to gain admittance to the concert. “There were some people who were out of control: ‘I’m here to mosh, I’m here to throw punches,’” he said, describing the behavior of others. “I don’t think it was security [at fault] so much as the people.”

During Scott’s set, Garcia was standing far from the stage when he felt the crowd start to repeatedly surge forward.

Travis Scott performs at the Astroworld Festival on Friday.
(Amy Harris / Invision )

Dahl, the Denver entrepreneur, and his son were shielded from the crowd because they were sitting in an elevated VIP section, where they could see the crowd grow unruly, “swaying” and shifting forward. “It just got really amped up,” Dahl said.

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Vanessa Johnson, 20, a business student at Edward Waters University who was close to the stage, said, “Things weren’t really crazy until Travis came on.”

Johnson was with friend Julian Ponce, 21, and both said that soon after Scott appeared, they heard people shouting, “Stop the show!”

“There was somebody passed out,” said Ponce, a University of Texas-San Antonio psychology student, who turned to see a circle of people behind him holding the crowd back as they tried to aid a man on the ground.

“You kept going forward, backward — you couldn’t move,” Ponce said.

The crowd watches as Travis Scott performs at the Astroworld Festival on Friday.
(Jamaal Ellis / Houston Chronicle )

“It felt like life or death the whole time we were in the crowd. I have bruises all over me. People were kicking each other, pushing,” said Rebecca Kallabat, 26.

As the crowd pushed her, Kallabat said she thought: “If I fall, I’m going to die.” She pointed to bruises below her cut-off jean shorts.

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Another member of her group, T.J. Yalda, 32, who had attended Scott’s shows more than half a dozen times including Astroworld and loved to mosh, said he wasn’t surprised by the rough crowd.

“It’s normal behavior. There was just way too many kids,” Yalda said. “It’s like playing with fire.” In one of the mosh pits, a youth hit him in the face and busted his lip, Yalda said.

Aerial view of several ambulances lined up in a parking lot at an event venue at night
Ambulances line up to take casualties away at the Astroworld music festival in Houston on Friday.
(KTRK-TV )

Scott’s concerts are well-known for tumultuous energy and boisterous physical activity in front of the stage. One Scott song, 2018’s “Stargazing,” contains the lyric “and it ain’t a mosh pit if ain’t no injuries.”

Scott had previously pleaded guilty to charges of disorderly conduct related to a 2017 concert in Arkansas where officials said he encouraged fans to rush the stage.

Scott also pleaded guilty to reckless conduct charges in a case related to a 2015 stampede at Lollapalooza in which he had also urged fans to push toward the stage, causing a 15-year-old girl to be trampled.

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Scott did not tell fans to go for the stage at the Houston show, though videos show some fans yelling to get his and the staff’s attention about the growing crisis in the crowd. At about the 40-minute mark, Scott pauses the show again. “Hold, hold, hold, we need some help, somebody passed out right here. ... Security, let’s get in there.” Moments later, the performance resumes.

Videos show fans chanting, “Stop the show! Stop the show!” in between songs.

Music festivals like Astroworld have become the backbone of the concert industry, generating millions for headline artists and promoters. Astroworld is produced by ScoreMore Shows and Live Nation Entertainment, the world’s largest event-promotion company.

Next weekend in Las Vegas, promoters Goldenvoice and AEG Presents are scheduled to hold a three-day hip-hop festival called Day N Vegas, during which Scott is to be one of the headliners, alongside Kendrick Lamar and Tyler, the Creator. Scott is also set to be one of the headliners at April’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival.

Hennessy-Fiske reported from Houston, Kaleem from Los Angeles and Pearce from Santa Cruz. Craig Marks in Los Angeles and Jenny Jarvie in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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