Daily Press

Houston death toll rises to 9 after student dies of injuries

- By Juan Lozano

HOUSTON — A 22-yearold college senior who was critically injured at the Astroworld festival in Houston has died, the family’s lawyer said Thursday, making her the 9th person to die after throngs of fans surged toward the stage during a performanc­e by headliner Travis Scott.

Bharti Shahani died Wednesday night, attorney James Lassiter said during a news conference.

“Bharti was a shining star in the community,” Lassiter said. “She was a sister, a daughter, a high-achieving college student about to graduate from Texas A&M University with high grades.”

Shahani’s family said she had been studying electronic­s systems engineerin­g.

Her mother, Karishma Shahani, became emotional during the news conference. She pointed to her heart as she cried: “What happened to her? I want my baby back. I’m empty here.”

Officials have not disclosed details about any of the fans who were hospitaliz­ed, but the family of a 9-year-old boy who attended the concert with his father has said the child was in a medically induced coma after sustaining injuries to his heart, lungs and brain.

Hundreds more people were injured in the surge Nov. 5 as Scott took to the stage. A criminal investigat­ion into the deaths at Astroworld is underway.

Scott was only minutes into his show at the Astroworld music festival when at least one Houston officer radioed over a police channel that the main stage had been compromise­d by a crowd surge.

The police radio traffic from the concert, obtained by the Houston Chronicle, reveals how quickly law enforcemen­t became

aware of the rising danger in the throng of concertgoe­rs shortly after the rapper began performing at the sold-out music festival, which drew about 50,000 people.

Scott took the stage in his hometown of Houston shortly after 9 p.m.

“Looks like folks are coming out of the crowd complainin­g of difficulty breathing, crushing-type injuries,” one official said over the police radio around 9:21 p.m., according to the audio obtained by the newspaper.

Scott kept performing his set, which lasted about an hour. His attorneys have said he did not know about the tragedy unfolding in the crowd until after the show. The newspaper reported that officers spotted people leaving the crowd but that their voices remained calm through the first half-hour.

“I’m at the medical tent,” one officer radioed in around 9:30 p.m. “There’s a lot of people trampled and they’re passed out at the front stage.”

Later, another officer says: “We’re getting multiple reports of people getting injured. We have another report of cardiac situation with CPR by the stage.”

Houston police Chief Troy Finner said Wednesday

that police told organizers to shut down the performanc­e when fans in the crowd were administer­ed CPR. Authoritie­s gave word around 10:03 p.m. that the concert was in the process of shutting down, but witnesses say Scott and Drake, the superstar rapper who came on toward the end of Scott’s set as a special guest, kept performing.

Finner repeatedly refused to provide timelines Wednesday in what was just his second news briefing since the tragedy, saying the case was still under investigat­ion. He said more than 500 officers were working the festival, more than double the number assigned in 2019, the last time the festival was held.

But Finner said festival organizers had not provided clear records of how many private security guards were working the show.

It was up to Live Nation Entertainm­ent, the show’s promoter, to secure two mosh pits in front of the stage, Finner said.

Scott’s attorneys on Wednesday pointed to an operationa­l plan for the event that states only the festival director and executive producers have the authority to stop the show, “neither of which is part of Travis’s crew.”

 ?? BRANDON BELL/GETTY ?? Mourners pay their respects this week at a makeshift memorial outside NRG Park, site of the deadly Astroworld music festival, in Houston.
BRANDON BELL/GETTY Mourners pay their respects this week at a makeshift memorial outside NRG Park, site of the deadly Astroworld music festival, in Houston.

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