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“Within the first 30 seconds of the first song, people began to drown - in other people. In a lengthy Instagram post, an attendee named Seanna said people were packed in so tightly that they struggled to breathe as soon as Scott’s performance began. No major injuries were reported from the rush. local time, hundreds of eager and rowdy concertgoers had stampeded the entrance, knocking over fences and metal detectors, and appearing to overwhelm understaffed security teams guarding the perimeter. They knew what could’ve happened, and yet I don’t think they were prepared.”Įarlier in the day, at around 2 p.m. They had a stampede in the afternoon, they should have known that this could get out of hand. “I blame the city, I think they were not prepared. “They didn’t plan well enough,” said Cella, who lives in the Houston area. They saw dead bodies and whatnot.”Ĭella, 54, thinks the tragedy was the result of poor planning, and said organizers and local officials missed obvious warning signs earlier in the day. “It was horrible, it was dramatic, it was crazy,” Cella told The Daily Beast, adding that her son and her daughter’s boyfriend were also there. Mari Cella said her daughter Brea, who was pushed over a rail to safety by a stranger, told her mom it “felt like drowning in quicksand.” “I was screaming, ‘Do something! People are dying!’ They put their hands up, like, What can we do? I said, ‘You need to figure out where the nearest medical staff is, and get him there.’ He takes off running, and another security guard says, ‘Please come help via Reuters The security guard looked at her in a panic and said he didn’t know how, according to Eskins. Eskins asked if anyone had checked his pulse. She spotted another security guard carrying out a man who appeared to be in dire shape. It was then that Eskins said she realized the festival staff were hopelessly out of their depth. “The security guard dropped me off and left to go pull more people out.” “I wake up with a bottle of water in my lap, and I look around and there’s just bodies getting carried back,” Eskins said. She eventually came to in a safety zone just behind the teeming sea of people.
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And before I could say anything, I fainted.”Įskins’ boyfriend and a good Samaritan lifted her up and “they basically crowd-surf me out of there,” she said. “I was about to tell my boyfriend to tell my son that I loved him, because I really thought that I was not gonna see him again. Nothing could have prepared me for what I witnessed last night,” Eskins, 23, told The Daily Beast.
DROWNING IN QUICKSAND UPDATE
Update your settings here to see it.Ĭoncertgoer Madeline Eskins, an ICU nurse who has worked in the ER, was trapped in a crush of bodies near the front of the stage and said she thought she was going to die. This content is not available due to your privacy preferences. In a statement Saturday afternoon, Scott said he was “absolutely devastated by what took place last night” and gave his “total support” to investigators. In one clip, Scott spotted an ambulance with flashing lights, making mention of it from the stage, pausing for a few moments-and then sending two members of his entourage diving off the stage to crowd surf. Multiple videos showed fans dancing on top of emergency vehicles as they were trying to help unconscious people. Other videos show a cameraman ignoring attendees who were begging him to stop the show because people were dying. Scott eventually ended his performance but fan videos and witness accounts provided to The Daily Beast showed him still performing as fans and paramedics performed CPR on passed-out concertgoers. He said medics onsite were so overwhelmed they had to ask people in the crowd to administer CPR. Larry Satterwhite, who was working near the stage, said earlier Saturday. local time when the crowd began to compress toward the stage and people “began to fall out, become unconscious and it created additional panic,” Houston Police Chief Lt.