Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
alert-–-drake-is-dismissed-from-lawsuit-over-2021-astroworld-festival-crush-that-left-10-fans-deadAlert – Drake is dismissed from lawsuit over 2021 Astroworld festival crush that left 10 fans dead

Drake has been removed from the lawsuits relating to the 2021 Astroworld disaster that led to the deaths of ten fans who were crushed as the Canadian rapper took the stage alongside Travis Scott. 

The Hotline Bling singer performed with Scott at the end of the concert on Nov. 5, 2021, as the crowd surged and attendees were packed so tightly that many could not breathe or move their arms or legs. 

Authorities and festival organizers were trying to shut down the show.

The families of the 10 people who died during the concert, as well as hundreds who were injured, sued Drake, Scott and Live Nation — the festival’s promoter — as well as dozens of other individuals and entities.

Many of those who were sued, including Drake and Scott, have asked state District Judge Kristen Hawkins to dismiss the lawsuits against them. On Wednesday, Hawkins dismissed Drake from the case in a brief order.

The Hotline Bling singer performed with Scott at the end of the concert on Nov. 5, 2021, as the crowd surged and attendees were packed so tightly that many could not breathe or move their arms or legs

The Hotline Bling singer performed with Scott at the end of the concert on Nov. 5, 2021, as the crowd surged and attendees were packed so tightly that many could not breathe or move their arms or legs

The families of the 10 people who died during the concert, as well as hundreds who were injured, sued Drake, Scott and Live Nation — the festival's promoter — as well as dozens of other individuals and entities

The families of the 10 people who died during the concert, as well as hundreds who were injured, sued Drake, Scott and Live Nation — the festival’s promoter — as well as dozens of other individuals and entities

Drake was appearing alongside fellow rapper, headliner Travis Scott, at the doomed festival

Drake was appearing alongside fellow rapper, headliner Travis Scott, at the doomed festival 

Lawyers for Drake, whose full name is Aubrey Drake Graham, had argued during a court hearing April 1 in Houston that he was not involved in putting the concert together so was not liable for the deaths and injuries that had occurred.  

During a deposition he gave in November in Toronto, the Canadian rapper said in the moments before he took the stage, no one told him that people in the crowd were suffering cardiac arrests or other injuries. 

He said when he was on stage, the crowd looked like a blur and he couldn’t make out any details.

In the deposition, Drake was shown a video that the youngest victim, Ezra Blount, 9, took as he sat on his father’s shoulders.

‘Do you see the panic in those people’s eyes?’ an attorney asked Drake about the video.

‘I do, sir,’ the rapper responded.

Later, when asked by an attorney for Blount’s family about whether it would be important for him to hear from those who put the concert together about why Blount died, Drake said, ‘I think I would want answers for what happened, yes.’ 

Emergency personnel are seen here responding to the festival in November 2021

Emergency personnel are seen here responding to the festival in November 2021

 On Monday, Hawkins dismissed seven companies and individual people who had been sued. 

But she denied motions to dismiss that were filed by 10 other companies and individuals, including Apple Inc., which produced a livestream of the concert, and two companies associated with Scott. 

Hawkins was set to hear other motions to dismiss, including one related to Scott as an individual, on Monday.

Following an investigation by Houston Police, no charges were filed against Scott. A grand jury in June declined to indict him and five other people on any criminal counts related to the deadly concert. 

Police Chief Troy Finner declined to say what was the overall conclusion of his agency’s investigation.

In July, the police department made public its nearly 1,300-page investigative report in which festival workers highlighted problems and warned of possible deadly consequences.

Those killed, who ranged in age from 9 to 27, died from compression asphyxia, which an expert likened to being crushed by a car.

The first trial from the lawsuits is scheduled for May 6.

Some of the lawsuits have since been settled, including those filed by the families of four of the people killed during the concert. 

The most recent settlement related to a person who was killed was announced in court filings on Feb. 5, with lawyers for the family of 23-year-old Rodolfo ‘Rudy’ Peña saying they had settled their case.

VICTIMS OF TRAVIS SCOTT’S ASTROWORLD FESTIVAL

Ten people died at Travis Scott’s music festival in Houston, Texas, with the victims ranging in age from 9 to 27.

John Hilgert, 14 

John Hilgert, 14

John Hilgert, 14 

John Hilgert, of Hunters Creek Village, was identified as one of the concert fatalities on Saturday by officials at Memorial High School, where he was a freshman student.

Hilgert attended the concert with his long-time friend Robby Hendrix, 15.

Henrdix’s mother, Tracy Faulkner, bought her son’s ticket for his birthday and ‘ultimately regrets the decision’.

‘Everything about that night was a tragedy,’ Faulkner told the Houston Chronicle. ‘They were both in the same place at the same time and one came home and one we will never see.’

She said Hilgret and Hendrix had known each other for years and played football together.

‘John was a good student and athlete and so polite. He was the sweetest and smartest young man,’ she shared.

Brianna Rodriguez, 16 

Brianna Rodriguez, 16

Brianna Rodriguez, 16

Brianna Rodriguez was a dancer and junior in high school. Her family confirmed that she was one of the victims who died.

A GoFundMe account set up by her family described her as a ‘beautiful vibrant 16-year-old’.

‘Dancing was her passion and now she’s dancing her way to heaven’s pearly gates.’ 

Jacob Jurinek, 20

Jacob Jurinek attended the concert with his best friend Franco Patino when both were trampled to death. The pair grew up in the same Illinois town of Naperville.  

A friend, going by the name Ana Lissa Marie, was distraught at the death of Jurinek, who was studying art and media at Southern Illinois University, and had traveled to Houston with Patino to celebrate Jurinek’s birthday.

‘I lost all my respect for Travis Scott,’ she tweeted.

‘What happened was absolutely disgusting. RIP to all the ones that lost their lives. To Jacob Jurinek, you will be missed kid. thank you for all the laughs.

‘My condolences go to all the families that lost lives.’

Jacob Jurinek, 20

Franco Patino, 21

Other victims included University of Dayton student Franco Patino (right), 21, who was attending the event with his best friend, 20-year-old Jacob Jurinek, when both were trampled to death 

Franco Patino, 21    

The University of Dayton confirmed to DailyMail.com that student Franco Patino of Naperville, Illinois, attended the concert in Houston.

The mechanical engineering technology major was involved in several campus extracurriculars and had most recently been working in a co-op program in Mason, Ohio.

University president Eric F Spina extended his sympathy and prayers to Patino’s loved ones and the campus community.

Patino’s fraternity, Alpha Psi Lambda, also issued condolences to his friends and family.

‘It is with a very heavy heart, Alpha Psi Lambda National, Inc shares that our brother, Franco ‘Cuauhocelotl’ Patino, has passed on to Omega Chapter,’ the organization wrote on Facebook.

‘We extend our condolences to his family, friends, Alpha Nu Chapter and all that share in this loss. May his memory be eternal.’

The college senior joined the fraternity’s University of Dayton chapter a year earlier.

Patino (left) and Jurinek grew up in the same Illinois town and were best friends

Patino (left) and Jurinek grew up in the same Illinois town and were best friends

Axel Acosta, 21  

Edgar Acosta held a press conference with Texas attorney Tony Buzbee to announce he was suing over the death of his son Axel Acosta, who had traveled from Washington to attend the festival – his first concert.

Axel Acosta, 21

Axel Acosta, 21

‘They need to make things change in these type of events,’ he said.

‘Today it was me. I lost my son. It could’ve been you,’ Acosta said.

‘When you send your kid to have some fun, because somebody else is not providing the right… I don’t know I can explain. The right security.

‘Because it is not the first time that he has been in big events, right?

‘You can go to Disneyland and have fun. You can go to a baseball game and have fun. Because they have the right security, the right people, some people assisting those injured.

‘It’s hard to explain.’

Rodolfo ‘Rudy’ Peña, 23 

Peña, of Laredo, Texas, died of cardiac arrest after being injured at the show.

He was a medical assistant and criminal justice major with aspirations to become a model and dreamed of one day being a US Border Patrol agent.  

‘What happened this past weekend is a direct result of what happens when the pursuit of financial gain and fame take precedence over protecting the lives of the innocent,’ said Almaraz Law Firm, representing the Peñas, in a statement.

‘It is a testament to the current state of live events and the greed that runs rampant in this industry.

‘Nobody should feel unsafe enjoying something they love, and unfortunately this is exactly what has transpired.

‘We vow to work diligently and responsibly to bring justice to the Peña family and to all afflicted, and we will not rest until these voices have been heard loud and clear.

‘We will hold responsible parties accountable and fight to ensure that something positive comes of this unmitigated disaster. Something must change. Something will change.’ 

Rodolfo 'Rudy' Peña, 23

Rodolfo ‘Rudy’ Peña, 23

Madison Dubiski, 23

Madison Dubiski of Cypress, Texas, was identified as one of the victims.

The former Ole Miss student was yanked from her brother Ty, who tried to pull her to safety, in the surge and disappeared in the crowd.

Dubiski studied at the University of Mississippi between 2016 and 2017 and worked in advertising and marketing. She went to Cy-Fair High School, where she was a Varsity cheerleader and member of National Charity League, a community service organization for mothers and their daughters in middle and high school.

Friends said that her mother Michelle was her best friend and that she was very close with Ty, who graduated from Cy-Fair in 2019.

Madison Dubiski, 23

Madison Dubiski, 23

Danish Baig, 27  

Basil Mirza Baig took to Facebook Saturday announcing that his brother, Danish Baig also died at Astroworld.

‘My brother was killed in this horrendous event that was managed poorly and supervised by such horrible people,’ Baig wrote.

‘People were trampled, walked and stomped on. My brother tried to save my sister-in-law from these horrendous acts that were being done to her in the process he lost his life.’

Baig described Danish as a beautiful soul who put everyone before himself.

‘Last night he showed his courageous act to save my sister-in-law from those horrendous things that were being done. I am lost of words and in true trauma from this event,’ he added.

‘I was there and I wasn’t able to save my brother. People were hitting pushing and shoving and did not care for anyone’s life.’

Baig also accused the rapper of provoking the chaos by ‘calling people to the stage to jump into the crowd’ and for ‘not stopping the show’.

‘This is not the end,’ Baig warned. ‘My family and I will go to the full extent to make sure he is brought to justice.’

Danish Baig, 27

Danish Baig, 27

Bharti Shahani, 22

Bharti Shahani, a senior at Texas A&M, died from injuries sustained at Astroworld

Bharti Shahani, a senior at Texas A&M, died from injuries sustained at Astroworld

Shahani, a Texas A&M senior, was critically injured at Astroworld and was on a ventilator at Houston Methodist Hospital, where she was taken after the concert.

She was declared brain dead and was taken off the ventilator shortly thereafter. She was the ninth person to die from the crowd surge. 

It was the first festival Shahani had ever attended, her family said.  

Her family’s attorney, James Lassitier, said: ‘Bharti was a shining star in the community.’

‘She was a sister, a daughter, a high-achieving college student about to graduate from Texas A&M University with high, high grades.’ 

Ezra Blount, 9

Blount was the tenth – and youngest – person to die from injuries sustained at Astroworld Festival.

He had been trampled at the concert, placed in a medically induced coma and was on life support for a week before he succumbed to his injuries.

The young boy had spent the concert seated on the shoulders of his father, Treston Blount.

Treston passed out from lack of oxygen and, once we regained consciousness, was unable to locate his son.

By the time the father-son pair were reunited, Blount had suffered  swelling in his brain as well as ‘trauma in nearly all organs.’ 

Ezra Blount (right) and his father, Treston Blount (left), are pictured at Astroworld

Ezra Blount (right) and his father, Treston Blount (left), are pictured at Astroworld

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