Set to start next month, the trial will be the pivotal first clash in billion-dollar litigation over Travis Scott's deadly 2021 festival.
The star rapper had asked to be dismissed from the billion-dollar civil litigation over the 2021 disaster, which left 10 dead and hundreds injured.
With the first trial looming this spring, Scott's attorneys say he's not legally liable for injuries and deaths at the 2021 music festival.
The star rapper, who was on stage with Travis Scott during some of the deadly concert, says he shouldn't be named in the massive litigation.
The Houston Police Department's more than 1,200-page report on the 2021 crowd crush disaster offers a full accounting of the chaos.
The more than 1,200-page document details the police department's sprawling investigation into the disaster, which left 10 dead and hundreds more injured.
The album marks the rapper's first studio set in nearly five years.
A grand jury is weighing charges, but Scott's attorney tells Billboard that police have not indicated there is "any evidence of a crime” on the part of his client.
Critics say the restrictions deprive the public of crucial information about an important case, but an appeals court doesn't share those concerns.
The agreement clarifies permitting and safety measures at the complex, where 10 people died during a performance by Travis Scott last November.