Astroworld tragedy: Victims identified in deadly Houston music festival
The families of the victims of the 2021 Astroworld Festival are speaking out in the wake of the tragedy
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The families of the victims of the 2021 Astroworld Festival are speaking out in the wake of the tragedy at the Travis Scott concert in Houston, Texas.
Scott, whose real name is Jacques Bermon Webster, was performing at the music festival he founded when the crowd reportedly surged, resulting in eight deaths and more injuries. He has since faced criticism over the decision to keep the show going while first responders did their best to help the injured audience members. He was named in three separate lawsuits by victims and other Astroworld 2021 attendees.
Although he has previously stated that he was unaware of the severity of the situation in the crowd from the stage, many are still pointing the blame for the incident at the rapper.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
While the list of names and ages of the deceased speak to the wide reach Scott has, it also spells a cautionary tale of how dangerous large crowd gatherings can be when rowdiness overtakes the audience.
Now, days after the deadly concert, several of the families who were affected are speaking out.
ASTROWORLD FESTIVAL INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION BEING EXPLORED BY HOUSTON ELECTED JUDGE: LIVE UPDATES
Ezra Blount
The mayor of Houston took to Twitter late Sunday to mourn the death of a 9-year-old boy who suffered serious injuries while attending the Astroworld music festival earlier this month in the city.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Ezra Blount, who lived in Dallas, had been placed in a medically induced coma after suffering severe damage to vital organs after he was "kicked, stepped on, and trampled" during a crowd surge on Nov. 5, according to a lawsuit filed on behalf of his family. Ben Crump, the family’s lawyer, said the boy died on Sunday at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.
In a statement issued to Fox News by the family's attorney, Ben Crump, he notes that the family is currently mourning the devastating loss.
"The Blount family tonight is grieving the incomprehensible loss of their precious young son," Crump's statement reads. "This should not have been the outcome of taking their son to a concert, what should have been a joyful celebration. Ezra’s death is absolutely heartbreaking. We are committed to seeking answers and justice for the Blount family. But tonight we stand in solidarity with the family, in grief, and in prayer."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The child incurred severe damage to his brain, kidney, and liver after being "kicked, stepped on, and trampled, and nearly crushed to death," according to a lawsuit his family has filed against Scott and the event’s organizer, Live Nation. The Blount family is seeking at least $1 million in damages.
Bharti Shahani
Bharti Shahani, died Wednesday night, attorney James Lassiter said during a news conference with the family.
Shahani, a high-achieving Texas A&M student, had been hospitalized since being critically injured at the concert.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Bharti’s relatives described her as diligent in her electronics systems engineering studies and someone who always thought of others — including that she had signed up to donate her organs when she died.
Astroworld was supposed to be a rare escape, her sister Namrata Shahani said.
"For the first time in her life, she just wanted to have fun, and that was taken from her," Namrata said.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Namrata said her sister’s last words to her were, "Are you OK?"
Her cousin, Mohit Bellani, attended the concert too. He said Shahani had two heart attacks on the way to the hospital. "Bharti was the glue of the family. She was the super glue of the family" he said.
Franco Patino
Franco Patino, a 21-year-old University of Dayton student was among the eight killed during the concert, the Dayton Daily News reported, citing a campus-wide email.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Patino, from Naperville, Illinois, was majoring in mechanical engineering technology with a minor in human movement biomechanics, according to the paper.
TRAVIS SCOTT WILL COVER ASTROWORLD VICTIMS' FUNERAL EXPENSES, OFFER THERAPY TO FESTIVAL ATTENDEES
Speaking to People, Franco’s brother, Julio, described what a "big heart" his little brother had and noted that he was the type to always go above and beyond for other people. That is evident by the new job that he was excited to have working for a biomedical engineering co-op where he was helping to develop something to prevent blood clots in the heart, his brother told the outlet.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
He described his brother as a normal guy with average interests, such as sports, video games and good food. Julio noted he was in attendance at the Travis Scott concert to celebrate his best friend Jacob Jurinek’s 21st birthday. Jurinek is among the eight dead as well.
Unfortunately, Julio was able to watch his little brother’s final moments unfold on social media.
"First I saw his friend passed out ... and then I noticed him passed out. Then I found a video of somebody giving my brother CPR, passed out," Julio told the outlet. "That one broke my heart. That's all I really saw, and the moment of fear in everybody's faces and just him just gone."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
TRAVIS SCOTT, DRAKE SUED OVER ASTROWORLD CONCERT INCIDENT
He continued: "I am so upset at the way that they handled everything there. Just the amount of people and the lack of control. They were conducting everything where, despite people being passed out, they just kept on going. They would stop a couple times, then they would keep on going instead of completely stopping everything."
Julio also noted that he felt like officials should have stopped the show as soon as they realized what was going on.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Mirza Danish Baig
Mirza Danish Baig was revealed to be another of the victims of the incident. He reportedly died at the Astroworld Festival while trying to save his fiancée, Olivia Swingle.
"He managed to get it to where she was able to get out," Danish's brother Ammar Baig told People magazine of his 27-year-old sibling. "Somehow, the ambulance managed to get to her and then, by the time they got to my brother, they tried resuscitating him. And they said that before they got to the hospital, he couldn't make it."
TRAVIS SCOTT'S ASTROWORLD DEATHS WERE PRECEDED BY FAN INJURIES AT 2019 FESTIVAL
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Their younger brother Basil was also in attendance and told the outlet that the crowd was hitting Olivia, prompting Mirza to take action.
"People started hitting them, people started hitting his fiancée, started [doing] a lot of things to her. She's bruised up, and he was trying to save her," he explained, adding, "And no one there was there to help him."
Baig pressed that Mirza "had a huge heart" and would do everything possible to "take care of everybody."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"We just want prayers for him," Baig said of the middle child of five siblings while on his way to Mirza’s funeral. "He was the funny one, the goofy one, the outgoing one. Our brothers and sisters have our own personalities, but he was the glue to it all."
Rudy Peña
The 23-year-old had a full life ahead of him, and the criminal justice major and rehab clinic medical assistant’s brother-in-law Sergio Gonzalez told People magazine that he and his wife are demanding answers to how Peña ended up being one of eight victims in the Astroworld Festival tragedy.
"He was a young man who had a clean record. He was well-behaved and loved sports. Of his five siblings, he was the most calm," Gonzalez, who said their family found out about Peña’s death "in the worst way," shared. "We found out around 12:30 last night from a friend of Rudy that was with him that he had just passed out. It wasn't until this afternoon that we found out he had died."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Peña’s mother was "distraught" when she learned of her son’s death.
According to Gonzalez, Peña played football in high school and described him as "the calmest" and "most playful" among the siblings. He was also "the sweetest with everyone," Gonzalez said.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Peña "was the most spoiled, since he was the youngest," Gonzales recalled of his brother-in-law. "[He] was always hanging out with his friends. I've been with my wife since before he was born, and it hurts so much," Gonzalez said.
ASTROWORLD: PETITION TO OUST TRAVIS SCOTT AS COACHELLA HEADLINER GAINS STEAM AFTER DEADLY DISPLAY
"We're so angry. There are always so many concerts and they're always great, but you never imagine that there'll be a tragedy," he continued. "You never go to a concert and think you're going to die. You pay for your ticket, go to a concert, have fun and go home — you never think you'll go through something like this."
Added Gonzales: "I am really angry ... If there's a multitude of people gathering outside, why wasn't there more control? That's where my anger comes from."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Jacob "Jake" Jurinek
Jurinek was a 20-year-old junior at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, where he was "pursuing his passion for art and media," his family said in a statement Sunday. He was just over two weeks short of his 21st birthday.
TEXAS NURSE LOST CONSCIOUSNESS AT 'UNCONTROLLABLE' ASTROWORLD FESTIVAL: 'THERE WAS NO WAY OUT'
He was attending the concert with Patino, his friend and former high school football teammate, according to Patino’s father, Julio Patino. He was deeply committed to his family and was known as "Big Jake" by his younger cousins.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
He will be missed by his father, Ron Jurinek, with whom Jake became especially close after his mother died in 2011.
"In the decade since, Jake and Ron were inseparable — attending White Sox and Blackhawks games, sharing their love of professional wrestling, and spending weekends with extended family and friends at Jake’s favorite place, the family cottage in Southwestern Michigan," the family's statement said.
"We are all devastated and are left with a huge hole in our lives," his father, Ron Jurinek, added in an emailed statement.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
John Hilgert
The youngest victim, 14-year-old Hilgert, was at the concert with classmate Robby Hendrix, whose mother, Tracy Faulkner, spoke with the Houston Chronicle. The boys had hoped to get a good spot to watch the show.
"Everything about that night was a tragedy," Faulkner told the newspaper. "John was a good student and athlete and so polite. He was the sweetest and smartest young man."
ASTROWORLD ATTENDEE SAYS HE MADE IT OUT OF THE DEADLY CONCERT 'BY THE GRACE OF GOD'
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Madison Dubiski
Just 23, the Houston native was a varsity cheerleader in high school and member of a community service group called the National Charity League, according to a former classmate who spoke to the Houston Chronicle.
"She was definitely the life of the party and loved by so many people," Lauren Vogler told the newspaper.
Meanwhile, family friend Claudia Sierra added to the Chronicle that Dubiski was her mom's best friend and she loved watching her brother play sports.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Brianna Rodriguez
A mere 16 years old, the Heights High School student "loved to dance," her family relayed to People magazine.
Pink ribbons and balloons adorned the fence outside of her high school, spelling out "Bri."
"Brianna was someone who performed with the band and was someone who could always make anyone smile," the Heights High School band said in a tweet.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
Her high school dance team remembered her in an Instagram post, saying that she was with the group for three years, served as the junior social officer and "never failed to put a smile on everyone's face.
"She was a wonderful friend, teammate, dancer, sister, daughter, and leader. The bulldog community is deeply saddened and will honor her in every way we can. We love you Brianna," the team said in the post.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Axel Acosta Avila
Avila, 21, was a computer science major at Western Washington University. His father, Edgar Acosta, told KOMO-TV his son was among the victims who died at the festival.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The university in Bellingham, Washington, released a statement on Sunday: "By all accounts, Axel was a young man with a vibrant future. We are sending our condolences to his family on this very sad day."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.