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Could Travis Scott face criminal charges after the Astroworld tragedy? Legal experts explain
Just days after the crowd-crush disaster at Travis Scott's Astroworld festival in Houston that left nine dead and hundreds injured, the number of civil lawsuits brought against the organizers has already reached well into double figures and is growing by the hour. Damages from the suits could run into the hundreds of millions of dollars or more.
The scale of the tragedy will prompt a reckoning for concert promoters, who will have to reassess logistical and safety issues surrounding festival staging, ticketing, mass-casualty planning and security and medical protocols.
But in addition to the civil claims against Scott, concert promotion giant Live Nation, Texas promoter Scoremore Shows and others, could criminal charges be filed in the wake of the Astroworld disaster — possibly even against the 30-year-old rap superstar Scott, who has a history of inciting crowds into frenzied behavior at shows?
"This is primarily a Live Nation problem, but Scott has a lot of accountability here," said Kurt Arnold, a partner with the Houston-based law firm Arnold & Itkin, which represents more than 100 families in lawsuits related to Astroworld, including the family of one of the nine fatalities.