Travis Scott concert survivor blasts 'feral' revelers who trampled the injured ...

Travis Scott concert survivor blasts 'feral' revelers who trampled the injured ...
Travis Scott concert survivor blasts 'feral' revelers who trampled the injured ...

Survivors of the deadly Travis Scott concert crush say others in the crowd were 'feral' and trampled victims, with one man even claiming one of the dead died in his arms.  

Selena Beltran says she was 'shocked to see people act so inconsiderate and feral' at Astroworld Fest on Friday, where eight people died and at least 27 were injured following a fatal stampede.

She struggled to breathe as the crowd tightened while rapper Travis Scott approached the stage in Houston. 

'I fell backwards and it felt like it was the end for me. To think that's how I'll die, I was so scared,' Beltran told CNN. 'I did not know what to do. It was all happening so fast, but so slow and I couldn't react. I just screamed.'

She witnessed people trampling over unconscious people on the ground. 

'I was shocked to see people act so inconsiderate and feral. It was insane to see so many just run others over like wild animals,' she said. 

'People did not care, they still tried to squeeze through just to get to the front without thinking of the consequences and who it would affect.'

Billy Nasser, who works as a DJ, called Friday's Astroworld show 'a death trap', and recalled picking up a victim without a pulse whose eyes rolled back in their head as he tried to help

Billy Nasser, who works as a DJ, called Friday's Astroworld show 'a death trap', and recalled picking up a victim without a pulse whose eyes rolled back in their head as he tried to help 

TK Tellez described the show as: 'Imagine listening to Travis Scott and people screaming for their lives at the same time'

TK Tellez described the show as: 'Imagine listening to Travis Scott and people screaming for their lives at the same time'

Madeline Eskins, an ICU nurse who attended the show and ended up helping staff perform CPR, said: 'I've never seen anything like it. I felt like I was going to die.'

Madeline Eskins, an ICU nurse who attended the show and ended up helping staff perform CPR, said: 'I've never seen anything like it. I felt like I was going to die.'

Travis Scott, above on Friday, reportedly kept performing for 37 minutes after paramedics and others began responding to he mass casualty event, where eight people died

Travis Scott, above on Friday, reportedly kept performing for 37 minutes after paramedics and others began responding to he mass casualty event, where eight people died

Someone pulled her up and she tried to perform CPR on people who had fainted with a nurse she met in the crowd.  

'I was beginning to go into shock, although I was trying to keep my composure and not panic. It was terrifying. I felt like it was a nightmare,' she said.

'I looked around and just saw people stare and others continuing to enjoy themselves as if these people meant nothing. It felt like there was little humanity in that crowd.'

She says she saw the bodies of people she had performed CPR on being carried away by medics.

'I knew they had passed away,' she said. 'I could not sleep last night. The moment kept replaying in my mind over and over again.'

Concertgoers have described similar scenes of being unable to breathe and calling out for help as Scott reportedly performed for over half an hour after first responders had been called over to the mass casualty event.

Concertgoer Billy Nasser called the show a 'death trap.'

'I picked some kid up and his eyes rolled to the back of his head, so I checked his pulse. I knew he was dead,' Nasser, who works as a DJ, told CNN. 'I checked the people around me. And I just had to leave him there, there was nothing I could do. I had to keep going.

'Kids were dropping left and right,' Billy Nasser said, adding that paramedics couldn't reach the crowd

'Kids were dropping left and right,' Billy Nasser said, adding that paramedics couldn't reach the crowd

'Kids were dropping left and right,' he said, adding that his attempts to tell concert workers to stop the show fell on deaf ears.

'There wasn't enough security guards and there wasn't enough EMTs and people helping out the crowd. The paramedics couldn't even reach the crowd,' Nasser said.

Madeline Eskins, an ICU nurse who attended the show and later posted a harrowing account of the scene backstage and behind the crowd as untrained staff tried to revive attendees, described the moments that led to the stage rush.

'He started a countdown about 30 minutes before he performed - he started a timer on the big screen,' she said.

'And all of a sudden, people compressed up against each other and were pushing forward and backward. As the timer got closer to coming down to zero, it just - it got worse and worse.'

Travis Scott took to Instagram Saturday night (pictured) after eight people died during his performance at Astroworld Festival

Travis Scott took to Instagram Saturday night (pictured) after eight people died during his performance at Astroworld Festival

'It happens, people rush the stage, no big deal,' Eskins said. 'It's uncomfortable, some get hurt, but this was way overcrowded. I've never seen anything like it. I felt like I was going to die.'

'I've been to concerts and, yes, it gets tight, but I've never felt like I was going to pass out,' she said. 'I never saw people collapsing. I definitely never saw anybody die.' 

TK Tellez, 20, told CNN that the crowd began compressing about an hour before Scott hit the stage, getting worse when he actually appeared.   

'The crowd became tighter and tighter, and at that point it was hard to breathe. When Travis came out performing his first song, I witnessed people passing out next to me,' Tellez told CNN.

'We were all screaming for help, and no one helped or heard us. It was horrifying. People were screaming for their lives, and they couldn't get out. Nobody could move a muscle.

People around him began to fall, which caused him to fall, and people also packed on top of him, some of them unconscious. 

'Everybody was crying; it was the scariest sound I've ever heard,' Tellez said. 'Imagine listening to Travis Scott and people screaming for their lives at the same time.'

He said there 'was just not enough people to help everyone 

'Travis Scott would have a short time in between songs, and we would scream our vocal chords out so someone could hear us but nobody did.

'This year's festival will be stuck with me forever. I've never seen someone die in front of my eyes. It was horrific.'

Journalist Joey Guerra, who has covered the music scene in Houston for about 10 years, according to CNN, said things were normal throughout the day until Scott got ready to come out that night.

He also added that Scott stopped to take stock of the situation in the audience multiple times.

'You see things like that a lot, people being carried out because of exhaustion or dehydration or things like that,' Guerra told CNN. 

'He did stop the show, I want to say, three or four times when he noticed people in distress.'

Echoing Eskins' recollection, Jeffrey Schmidt says things got worse when the 30-minute countdown for Scott's set began and breathing got harder and harder for him. He was at the show with his best friend Casey Wagner.

'Me and Casey decided to try our best to make our way out of the crowd slowly. Little did we know, all hell was about to break loose. People started to pass out and fall to the ground,' Schmidt told CNN.

'Casey, I and other crowd members tried to hold back the crowd from trampling over them. But the force of the crowd was too powerful, and people started to topple on top of the them including Casey and I.'

Axel Acosta, 21, had traveled from Washington to attend the festival - his first concert. Cops shared a photo of his body after they were unable to identify him, with his father Edgar claiming his remains later on Sunday

Axel Acosta, 21, had traveled from Washington to attend the festival - his first concert. Cops shared a photo of his body after they were unable to identify him, with his father Edgar claiming his remains later on Sunday 

The two friends found themselves became separated and were trampled under other bodies. Schmidt's legs got stuck under other attendees.

'At that moment my mind went into full survival mode. All I could hear was people screaming and crying for help,' Schmidt said. 'I lost all hope and thought I was going to die right there because I could not get my legs out. I fought for my life.

'I thought I was never going to see my best friend again, life did not feel real,' he said.

The friends later reunited and survived, with Schmidt calling the night a 'fight for survival.'

He added: 'I witnessed multiple people unconscious and unable to breathe, as people under me were crying for my help. But I physically could not help. That is what traumatized me the most, that I could not help the people around me. I felt heartbroken for them and their families.'

On Saturday, Travis Scott shared his shock after eight people were crushed to death at his Houston concert on Friday - but the rapper has twice been convicted for encouraging fans to jump security barriers and rush the stage at previous concerts. 

Scott, born Jacques Bermon Webster II, posted an emotional video saying he was 'devastated' about the deaths at Houston's Astroworld Fest on his Instagram.

He added: 'I can't imagine anything like this happening.'

But that has raised eyebrows over footage showing multiple incidents of crowds stampeding towards Scott at prior performances at Lollapalooza in Chicago in 2015 and at an outdoor venue in Arkansas in 2017. Both incidents resulted in misdemeanor convictions for Scott. 

There's no suggestion Scott asked fans to rush his stage during the Friday night performance that ended with eight deaths.

One nurse who was in attendance has rubbished claims that a man was seen injecting people with a needle moments before the crush.

A statement issued on Astroworld's account also mentioned people suffering from cardiac arrests and asked anyone with knowledge to contact Houston PD, sparking claims that organizers are trying to pass the buck over alleged poor crowd control that turned deadly.  

Houston PD Chief Troy Finner said there had been reports of a security guard stabbed with a needle and later being revived with Narcan, although there have been no reports of the crowd being drugged in the same way. 

Meanwhile, a fan who was paralyzed after falling from a balcony during a Scott concert in 2017 has blasted the singer for putting fans' safety at risk. 

A lawyer for Kyle Green, a 27-year-old who was injured at Scott's April 2017 concert at Terminal 5 in New York City, says that Green was 'devastated and heartbroken' for the families of the eight people who died at Scott's Friday night concert. 

Kyle Green, 27, was left partially paralyzed at a Travis Scott show after Scott encouraged another fan to jump off a balcony. He says Friday's deaths could have been avoided 'had Travis learned his lesson'

Kyle Green, 27, was left partially paralyzed at a Travis Scott show after Scott encouraged another fan to jump off a balcony. He says Friday's deaths could have been avoided 'had Travis learned his lesson'

Travis Scott show at Terminal 5 in NYC

Travis Scott show at Terminal 5 in NYC

NYC 2017: Green ended up partially paralyzed after cracking several vertebrae when rowdy fans rushed the balcony of Terminal 5 in New York in May 2017. Scott egged one fan to jump. In video of the incident, one concertgoer can be heard saying, 'I don't wanna die in here.'

Travis Scott at Lollapalooza 2015

Travis Scott at Lollapalooza 2015

CHICAGO 2015:  Scott pled guilty to misdemeanor reckless conduct after his fans jumped a security barricade at the Lollapalooza festival in Chicago

Travis Scott fans rush Arkansas stage in 2017

Travis Scott fans rush Arkansas stage in 2017

ARKANSAS 2017: Scott encouraged fans to go past security and rush the stage at a May 2017 show in Arkansas. He pled guilty to disorderly conduct the next year

Tickets to the two-day Astroworld festival sold out in under an hour in May, when Scott announced in a since-deleted tweet: 'We still sneaking the wild ones in'

Tickets to the two-day Astroworld festival sold out in under an hour in May, when Scott announced in a since-deleted tweet: 'We still sneaking the wild ones in'

Green says he was forced over the edge of a balcony at the venue, which he called 'severely crowded.' He broke several bones and vertebrae and can only walk with a 'significant, significant disability.'

In a statement to DailyMail.com, Green's attorney Howard Hershenhorn said that Scott's security picked Green up 'like a sack of potatoes' instead of 'putting him in a neck brace and on the backboard.'

'He’s even more incensed by the fact that it could have been avoided had Travis learned his lesson in the past and changed his attitude about inciting people to behave in such a reckless manner,' Hershenhorn told Rolling Stone

At the 2017 show, Scott had encouraged another fan to jump off the balcony. 

'I see you, but are you gonna do it?' Scott asked. 'They gonna catch you. Don't be scared. Don’t be scared!' 

" class="c6" scrolling="no"

In video of the incident, one fan can be heard saying, 'I don't wanna die in here.' 

Green sued Scott, his manager, concert promoter Bowery Presents and a security company six months after the incident while he was still confined to a wheelchair. The case is pending.

In August 2015, the 29-year-old, who is dating Kylie Jenner, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of reckless conduct after his fans jumped a security barricade at the Lollapalooza festival in Chicago.

The Office of Emergency Management said at the time: 'The performer played one song and then began telling fans to come over the barricades. Due to the security's quick response, the situation was remedied immediately and no fans were injured.

John Hilgert, 14, was the youngest victim of the horrific crush which killed eight people at Friday night's Astroworld Festival in Houston

PREV Former city councilman James McNeal faces murder charge after woman half his ... trends now
NEXT Female teacher, 35, is arrested after sending nude pics via text to students ... trends now