Hilda Sibrian - Houston's Injury Attorney

Crowd-Related Injuries

Crowd-related injuries are some of the most traumatic incidents a person can experience. The injuries sustained from crowd surges or crushes can range from mild concussions due to being pushed, shoved or knocked to the ground, to death from compression or trampling, and the trauma sustained from the absolutely helplessness victims feel can last a lifetime. These tragic events usually do not occur due to any one person’s actions, but are a result of  a systemic failure on the part of security, event planning, or other factors.

Moreover, these types of injuries are complicated. Because they are the result of failure on the part of event management, the way crowd-related injuries are proved is leagues above what is traditionally required of a personal injury case. 

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What is a Crowd Surge?

A crowd surge happens when a large group of people begins pushing or moving in the same direction at once, often without any single person meaning to cause harm. In tightly packed spaces, that force can move through the crowd like a wave, knocking people off balance, pinning them against barriers, or leaving them unable to breathe normally. Crowd surges are especially dangerous at concerts, festivals, stadiums, and other high-attendance events where exits, walkways, or front-of-stage areas become overcrowded.

What is a Crowd Crush?

Often the product of a crowd surge, a crowd crush refers to an increase in crowd density to the point where eventgoers are injured or killed. As more and more people move into one spot, often as the result of a surge, crowd density increases and individuals are compressed against one another or against barriers, walls, or the ground, creating intense, sustained pressure on the body.

In these conditions, victims are often unable to expand their lungs, leading to a form of suffocation known as compressive asphyxia. Others may suffer broken bones, internal injuries, or trampling if they fall and cannot get back up. Crowd crushes are most likely to occur in confined spaces with limited exits, sudden bottlenecks like entry gates or narrow corridors, or barricaded sections near stages as the crowd surges towards the artist.

Anatomy of a Crowd-Related Incident

The following is a breakdown of the many stages of crowd-related injuries.

1. Pre-Event Planning Failures

Event organizers, venue operators, and security teams are responsible for anticipating crowd size, movement patterns, and peak congestion points. They are also responsible for establishing an event layout that is condusive to crowd movement, and that provides easily identifiable entry and exit points.

However, venues are often guilty of:

  • Overselling or exceeding safe capacity limits
  • Poor site design, including narrow walkways or bottlenecking
  • Inadequate barrier placement near stages or entry points
  • Insufficient security staffing or medical personnel
  • Lack of a coordinated emergency action plan

All of these points boil down to one key legal term: foreseeability. The venue must appropriately plan out its crowds, and is responsible for injuries suffered when attendees are hurt due to these failures.

2. Crowd Buildup and Increase in Density

As more and more attendees enter the venue, crowds begin to become more and more dense. At 4-5 people per square meter, movement becomes very difficult; at 6+ people per square meter, attendees lose the ability to move independently.

Warning signs before a crowd becomes too dense to move can include:

  • Difficulty getting in and out of the venue (or crowd)
  • Visible overcrowding near stages, exits, or attractions
  • Compression zones forming near barriers or confined areas
  • Broken security checkpoints as crowds push past and overwhelm security

At this point, the situation is often still preventable, but only if organizers actively intervene to reduce the size of the crowd. Unfortunately, many organizers do not take action; such was the case during the 2021 Astroworld incident, when organizers were informed multiple times that concertgoers had been seriously injured and EMS could not access the floor.

3. Trigger Event and Crowd Surge

The most serious incidents involve a trigger that causes sudden movement within an already dense crowd. During the 2021 Astroworld incident, the fatal crowd surge was triggered by the appearance of Travis Scott taking the stage.

Other examples include:

  • A sudden rush toward a limited-access area
  • Panic caused by confusion, noise, or perceived danger
  • Poorly managed entry gates opening all at once

When this occurs in an overcrowded environment, the result is a crowd surge, where force moves through the crowd like a wave – often leading to falls, trampling, or compression. Those closest to barriers often suffer bruising, rib injuries or worse.

4. Loss of Control and Injury

Once a crowd surge begins, it is almost impossible to stop. Individuals may be knocked to the ground and unable to stand, pinned against barricades or other attendees, unable to breathe due to chest compression or trampled by others attempting to escape.

This is where the most severe injuries occur, including asphyxia, fractures, head trauma, and internal injuries.

5. Emergency Response Breakdown

In many cases, the harm is compounded by delays in emergency response. Dense crowds can make it extremely difficult for medical teams to reach victims quickly.

From a legal standpoint, these issues can significantly increase liability, as timely intervention may have prevented further injury or death.

6. Post-Incident Investigation and Liability

After the incident, determining responsibility requires a detailed reconstruction of events.  These Investigations typically focus on:

  • Event planning documents and capacity limits
  • Security staffing levels and deployment
  • Surveillance footage and attendee recordings
  • Internal communications between organizers and staff

Because multiple entities are involved, liability is often shared across several parties, including venue owners, promoters, and contractors.

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Types of Injuries Suffered in Crowd-Crush Incidents

Festivals, concerts and other events can cause serious injuries if crowds are not managed properly. These injuries can include:

  • Wrongful Death – As crowds surge and compress, eventgoers can be trampled or squeezed between other attendees, barricades, or fixed structures. Under these dense conditions, people often lose the ability to move or breathe. This phenomenon, often referred to as compressive or traumatic asphyxia, occurs when intense pressure on the chest and abdomen prevents the lungs from expanding normally. In some cases, this can lead to hypoxia, a general lack of oxygen, or anoxia, or total lack of oxygen.
  • Traumatic Brain Injuries – As crowds shove individual people around, these conditions can also produce traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). Victims may suffer blunt force trauma when they fall and strike their head on pavement, barricades, or stage equipment, or as a result of the compressive force described earlier.
  • Spinal Trauma – Spinal injuries are another serious risk during crowd surges. When individuals fall or are pushed with force, the spine can twist or compress unnaturally. Victims may suffer fractured vertebrae, slipped discs, or spinal cord damage. In some cases, a person pinned beneath a crowd cannot protect their neck or back. This prolonged compression can damage the spinal cord, potentially resulting in partial or complete paralysis.
  • Permanent Disability – Permanent disabilities may include paralysis, chronic pain, impaired mobility, neurological deficits, or reduced cognitive function. Victims may no longer be able to return to their previous jobs, particularly in physically demanding occupations. 

Other injuries can include:

  • Lacerations and puncture wounds
  • Broken bones
  • Respiratory injuries like lung contusions
  • Broken teeth

Astroworld Festival Crowd Crush Incident

The Astroworld Festival crowd crush occurred on November 5, 2021, during the opening night of the music festival at NRG Park. As rapper Travis Scott began performing, a large surge of attendees pushed toward the stage, compressing people in the densely packed crowd. Investigations after the fact showed that the venue faced overcrowding issues from early morning, when fans started overwhelming security checkpoints.

Who Was Found Responsible for the Astroworld Crowd Crush?

Victims and their families sued over 50 entities, declaring premises liability, negligent event planning, and wrongful death.

Some of these entities included:

  • Live Nation Entertainment – the festival promoter and organizer
  • ScoreMore Shows – co-organizer of the festival
  • Apple Inc. – which livestreamed the concert
  • Travis Scott and related production entities
  • Various security companies and contractors

Because so many defendants were involved, the cases were consolidated in multi-district litigation in Texas state court, allowing hundreds of claims to proceed under a coordinated process.

The incident resulted in 10 deaths and hundreds of injuries, including cases of cardiac arrest, traumatic asphyxia, broken bones, and severe psychological trauma. Emergency responders treated hundreds of attendees on-site and transported many to area hospitals.

Famous Crowd-Crush Related Injury Cases

While Astroworld is certainly the worst crowd-related incident in recent memory, there have been other similar incidents at concerts and festivals around the United States.

These incidents highlight systemic failures in security, crowd management, or inability to provide medical care.

Seoul Halloween Crowd Crush (2022)

While not U.S. based, the Itaewon Tragedy is yet another example of the serious dangers caused by poor planning. On October 29, 2022, a crowd surged through a narrow alleyway, resulting in the deaths of 159 people, and 196 injuries.

According to the followup investigation, over 100,000 people attempted to move through the alley, leading to a density of over 3.2 people per square meter.

Over 100 people were killed during a Rhode Island festival in 2003. The Station, a nightclub in West Warick, caught fire with more than 450 people in attendance. The fire was caused by pyrotechnics, which set fire to flammable foam installed as soundproofing.

The deaths were primarily due to fire-related injuries, smoke inhalation, and crowd-crush injuries as concertgoers tried to exit the building.

The Rolling Stones offered a free concert as a way to end their 1969 tour of the U.S. The concert featured major artists besides the Rolling Stones, including the Grateful Dead, Santana, and Jefferson Airplane, and saw an attendance of approximately 300,000 at the Altamont Speedway in northern California.

However, security was “largely improvised” and included several dozen members of the Hells Angels motorcycle club for security. The event resulted in the death of an 18-year-old man and many, many injuries.

If you’ve every heard the phrase, “never shout ‘fire’ in a crowded theater,” this is why.

The worst single-building fire in US history occurred in December 1903 when a faulty spotlight started started a fire at the Iroquois Theater in Chicago. 602 people died during the incident as a result not of fire, but crush asphyxia.

After the incident, investigators blamed the theater and event planners for:

  1. Multiple locked exits (to prevent ticketless entry)
  2. Obstructed exits
  3. Overcrowding

How Lawyers Make Compensation Possible After a Crowd-Crush Incident

Crowd-crush incidents are not typical accident cases. Proving negligence or liability in crowd-crush cases requires a special set of skills not generally available to the public as much of the information required to prove negligence in these kinds of cases is privileged, like planning information and internal communications.

For both grieving families and injured survivors, having a personal injury attorney is usually a prerequisite to holding defendants accountable. 

  • Mass tort consolidation – Astroworld saw over 50 defendants named across over 300 lawsuits. Many of these cases have dozens or sometimes hundreds of plaintiffs and often dozens of defendants. 
  • Shared liability – Because mass crowd injuries are the result of failures in planning and execution, there usually isn’t one single person that can be blamed; instead, these injuries happen as a result of massive failures between multiple defendants.
  • Unique evidence – Event cases rely heavily on privileged information, including event planning documents, security logs, crowd density data, and internal communications. This information is almost impossible for the average person to obtain.
  • Public and media scrutiny – High-profile cases influence timelines, increase the amount of pressure to settle, and jury perception. Lawyers help shield their clients from what is often very public outcry against the plaintiffs, and steer them away from early settlements.

Get In Touch With Our Personal Injury Legal Team Today!

Our team of Houston event injury lawyers is ready to assist you if you or a family member has suffered injuries in a construction accident. Don’t leave your recovery and livelihood to chance; you deserve compensation. Call us today and book your free and confidential consultation with an expert from our team. Get your compensation with The Law Offices of Hilda Sibrian™.

Hire an Attorney for Event Injuries in Houston, Texas

Crowd-related injury cases are never straightforward. Incidents at concerts, festivals, conventions, and sporting events often involve multiple parties, including venue owners, event promoters, security companies, vendors, and third-party contractors. Determining who is responsible requires an experienced lawyer who conducts an investigation into how the event was planned, staffed, and managed in real time.

If you or a loved one have been injured in a crowd-related accident in Houston, call the Law Offices of Hilda Sibrian today.

The Law Offices of Hilda Sibrian have served the Houston community for over 22 years, and are ready to represent those injured by crowd-related events. Hilda Sibrian serves the Houston metropolitan area, including Sugar Land, Missouri City, La Porte, Beaumont, Pasadena, The Woodlands, The Heights, Bellaire, Kingwood, Baytown and of course Houston proper. 

Call our office today or fill out our online contact form for a free consultation.

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