Travis Scott Sued for Allegedly Inciting Crowd at 2019 Music Festival Performance

The amended complaint comes months after 10 people were killed during a crowd surge at Astroworld Festival slide 2

A concertgoer who attended Travis Scott's May 2019 performance at a Miami music festival has sued the rapper, alleging that his incitement of the crowd led to a stampede that left her with serious injuries.

In an amended complaint filed on May 10 and obtained by PEOPLE, Marchelle Love claims that the crowd at the Rolling Loud Festival broke into a panic "as a direct and proximate result" of Scott's encouragement, and she was hurt in the ensuing chaos.

Scott, 30, was on stage at the Astroworld Festival in Houston in November when a crowd surge erupted, killing 10 concertgoers, including a 9-year-old boy.

A spokesperson for Scott tells PEOPLE that the complaint is "another blatant, cynical attempt to attack Travis, in this instance for a 3-year-old incident that is deliberately misrepresented."

The complaint also names SLS Consulting, the engineering company responsible for the festival's safety plan, Sequel Tour Solutions, which provided security, and Michael Sheehan, SLS' managing member, as defendants. Their attorneys did not immediately respond to request for comment