(Reuters) – A crush of fans pushing toward the stage while rap star Travis Scott performed at a Houston-area music festival last week has left eight people dead https://www.reuters.com/world/us/investigations-widen-into-deadly-stampede-houston-rap-concert-2021-11-07 and hundreds injured.
Here are profiles of seven of the eight people who were killed:
DANISH BAIG
Baig’s heroic final actions were remembered on Facebook by his brother, who said the man died trying to save his fiance from being crushed.
“My brother Danish Baig (was) a beautiful soul whose smile would light up the room and put everyone before himself. Last night he showed his courageous act to save my sister in law/his fiancé from those horrendous things that were being done. I am lost of words and in true trauma from this event. I was there and I wasn’t able to save my brother,” Basil Mirza Baig wrote on Facebook.
Danish and his fiance, Olivia Swingle, 25, both worked at AT&T Inc, his family told People.com. Danish, 27, who worked as a company district manager and travelled to the concert from Dallas, was a baby when he moved with his family from Karachi, Pakistan, to Texas.
Basil Baig told reporters that Travis Scott, Live Nation Entertainment Inc and “anybody who was affiliated with the Astroworld festival, they should be held liable and accountable for everything. They have blood on their hands.”
JACOB JURINEK
A college junior at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Jurinek was remembered as “a creative, intelligent young man, with a promising career in journalism and advertising,” the school’s chancellor, Austin Lane, said in a statement.
Jurinek was on the dean’s list this semester as a journalism major focusing on radio, television and digital media, a school spokeswoman said.
Jurinek lived in Naperville, Illinois, about 30 miles (48 km) west of Chicago. The 20-year-old college student spent many weekends with his father after the death of his mother in 2011, the New York Times reported.
FRANCO PATINO
Another Naperville, Illinois, native was Patino, 21. He attended the University of Dayton, where he was a mechanical engineering technology major. He also joined several campus organizations, including Alpha Psi Lambda, a Hispanic interest fraternity and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers.
AXEL ACOSTA
Acosta, 21, died in the crush, Houston-based Buzbee Law Firm said in a statement. A lawsuit against several parties involved in the Astroworld music festival will be filed on behalf of Acosta’s family and other victims, the lawyers said. Acosta, who was from Tieton, Washington, was a junior at Western Washington University in Bellingham. He was majoring in computer science, the New York Times reported.
JOHN HILGERT
The youngest person to be killed was Hilgert, 14, who was remembered over the weekend with green ribbons – his favorite color – placed around the campus of Houston-area Memorial High School, where he was a freshman, according to local television station KHOU.
An avid baseball player, he was known for his “unforgettable smile” and for striving for his best performance “every day, every game, every pitch,” Jordan Venable, the director of a travel baseball club, wrote on Facebook.
BRIANNA RODRIGUEZ
A member of the band at Heights High School in Houston who loved to dance, Rodriguez, 16, was “someone who could always make anyone smile,” the band’s Twitter account wrote. Her family set up an online fundraiser to help pay for funeral expenses.
RODOLFO ‘RUDY’ PENA
The youngest of five siblings, Pena, 23, of Laredo, Texas, was “always smiling,” his eldest sister told Rolling Stone. The former high school varsity football player was studying criminology at Laredo College in Laredo, Texas, and hoped to someday work for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, his family told Rolling Stone.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York, Erwin Seba in Houston and Brendan O’Brien in Chicago; Additional reporting by Joseph Ax, Nathan Frandino, Daniel Trotta, Shivam Patel and Tim Reid; Editing by Matthew Lewis)