'Things don't end up wrong. They start off wrong.' One family is taking it upon themselves to try and ensure concert safety as the disaster's year anniversary arrives.
"Things don't end up wrong. They start off wrong." One family is taking it upon themselves to try and ensure concert safety as the disaster's year anniversary approaches.It has been one year since Travis Scott's Astroworld Festival, where 10 people were crushed to death by a crowd surge at NRG Park, and little has changed with no update on the criminal investigation.
While their families are left trying to heal, there has been no update on where the criminal investigation stands. The Houston Police Department told ABC13 that they had no comment.to improve safety protocols at large venues in the city and county. However, there has been no public update.and released a report "addressing gaps that were identified as contributing to failures at the Astroworld event.
"Things don't end up wrong," Remington said. "They start off wrong. And if you look at the video that happened at the Astroworld concert, it started off wrong to have people busting through security gates. The police didn't have the ability to shut it down. The fire department didn't have the ability. Nobody had the ability to shut that mess down before it even started. A massive failure, all the way around.
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What 1 Astroworld victim's family is doing as little answers are given'Things don't end up wrong. They start off wrong.' One family is taking it upon themselves to try and ensure concert safety as the disaster's year anniversary approaches.
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Who should be held responsible for Astroworld? 1 year later, lawyers are still trying to figure it out.The roughly 5,000 plaintiffs who filed lawsuits in the aftermath of the Astroworld Festival are now part of what is expected to be a years long legal process to seek recourse.
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