Apple, Drake and others face $750 million lawsuit over Astroworld deaths
A new $750 million lawsuit has been filed against Apple, promoter Live Nation, and performers Drake and Travis Scott, alleging gross negligence lead to the injuries and deaths at the Astroworld concert.
A total of 10 people were killed, and more than 300 injured, when a crowd surged during Travis Scott's performance at Astroworld on November 5, 2021. Now a lawyer representing 125 concertgoers has filed a suit against the organizers, key performers, and also Apple, whose Apple Music service streamed the event.
According to The Houston Chronicle, local attorney Tony Buzbee claims gross negligence, and seeks damages for "the loss of mental and physical health, and human life."
"No amount of money will ever make these plaintiffs whole; no amount of money can restore human life," Buzbee says in his filing. "The quantum sought includes sufficient punitive damages to punish and make an example of all involved in the streaming, promotion, organization and failed execution of the concert, and also to encourage those who engage in such activity to do so with safety at the forefront, not just as an afterthought."
Buzbee has also took to Instagram to announce both this suit, and a future one.
"We filed suit today on behalf of 125 Astroworld concertgoers, to include the family of Axel Acosta," posted Buzbee. "Axel died at the concert. Many of the clients named in this lawsuit suffered broken bones, or twisted knees, or orthopedic injuries. Many have psychological injury."
"I expect we will file on behalf of another 100 individuals very soon," he continued. "[Based] on what I know now... it is my firm belief that every individual who attended that concert and who suffered injury will be fairly compensated. I intend to make sure of it."
The Houston Chronicle report was first spotted by iMore.
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A total of 10 people were killed, and more than 300 injured, when a crowd surged during Travis Scott's performance at Astroworld on November 5, 2021. Now a lawyer representing 125 concertgoers has filed a suit against the organizers, key performers, and also Apple, whose Apple Music service streamed the event.
According to The Houston Chronicle, local attorney Tony Buzbee claims gross negligence, and seeks damages for "the loss of mental and physical health, and human life."
"No amount of money will ever make these plaintiffs whole; no amount of money can restore human life," Buzbee says in his filing. "The quantum sought includes sufficient punitive damages to punish and make an example of all involved in the streaming, promotion, organization and failed execution of the concert, and also to encourage those who engage in such activity to do so with safety at the forefront, not just as an afterthought."
Buzbee has also took to Instagram to announce both this suit, and a future one.
"We filed suit today on behalf of 125 Astroworld concertgoers, to include the family of Axel Acosta," posted Buzbee. "Axel died at the concert. Many of the clients named in this lawsuit suffered broken bones, or twisted knees, or orthopedic injuries. Many have psychological injury."
"I expect we will file on behalf of another 100 individuals very soon," he continued. "[Based] on what I know now... it is my firm belief that every individual who attended that concert and who suffered injury will be fairly compensated. I intend to make sure of it."
The Houston Chronicle report was first spotted by iMore.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Good luck with that.
Apple's first move will be to dismiss the case against them.
The USA is being strangled by its own laws.
Lawers HAVE ruined America (North America excluding Canada, to be precise)
He is the lawyer who recruited 17 women to go after DeShaun Watson and has so far failed to extort any money from him despite running a media campaign.
And can someone tell me why Apple is on his list of potential extortion victims? What did they have to do with this?
that police go into a church and handcuffs a pastor. That wasn’t right.