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NewsMarch 14, 2014

AUSTIN, Texas -- A suspected drunken driver barreled through police barricades and drove down a crowded street at the South by Southwest festival early Thursday morning, killing two people and injuring 23 in an act authorities say was intentional...

By WILL WEISSERT and CHRIS TALBOTT ~ Associated Press
A bystander and a police officer tend to a man who was struck by a vehicle on Red River Street in Austin, Texas, at SXSW on Wednesday night. (Jay Janner ~ Austin American-Statesman)
A bystander and a police officer tend to a man who was struck by a vehicle on Red River Street in Austin, Texas, at SXSW on Wednesday night. (Jay Janner ~ Austin American-Statesman)

AUSTIN, Texas -- A suspected drunken driver barreled through police barricades and drove down a crowded street at the South by Southwest festival early Thursday morning, killing two people and injuring 23 in an act authorities say was intentional.

The driver struck multiple pedestrians about 12:30 a.m. on a block filled with concertgoers, continued down the street and hit and killed a man from the Netherlands on a bicycle and a woman from Austin on a moped, Austin police chief Art Acevedo said at a news conference Thursday. The driver eventually crashed and tried to run away, but he was shocked by a stun gun and taken into custody.

"... When somebody acts intentionally, it's very difficult to stop. You have a car here. You have a police officer that was forced to jump out of the way," Acevedo said Thursday.

Witnesses said the scene was chaotic. Acts performed at two side-by-side nightclubs on the street as part of the annual music, film and interactive conference that draws tens of thousands to Austin each year.

Hours later, a pool of blood still was on the crosswalk with a trail leading to the sidewalk, bits of broken taillight and a medical glove nearby.

The festival issued a statement that expressed condolences for the victims and said some events would be relocated because of the incident.

The driver, whose name also has not been released, faces two counts of capital murder and 23 counts of aggravated assault with a vehicle. Acevedo said it was an "intentional act," and the suspect has been booked and formal charges will be filed.

Two people were in critical condition Thursday with life-threatening head injuries and three patients remained in serious condition, said Dr. Christopher Ziebell, emergency department director at the University Medical Center-Brackenridge said. He also said the driver was treated for minor injuries.

"The most critical patients I have a great deal of concern for," Ziebell said. "We are going to do our best for them, but these are some of the worst injuries that we see and not everybody with these kinds of injuries is going to survive."

Massive Music, a company with offices in Amsterdam, New York and London, said employee Steven Craenmehr, 35, died suddenly in Austin. No one at the company responded to phone messages requesting additional information.

The names of the woman who died and those who were injured were not released.

Police said the incident started when an officer on a drunken-driving patrol tried to stop the silver Toyota sedan at a gas station a few blocks away. The car took off, weaving between parked cars, then driving at high speed the wrong way down a one-way street.

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The driver rammed through police barriers -- three wooden pieces held up by metal poles -- set up on Red River Street on the northeast edge of the entertainment district. It had been packed with revelers minutes earlier, but officials had cleared the area to create a fire lane.

Austin resident Kirk Visser, 47, lives across the street from the incident. Visser was watching TV when he heard the crash, and said he thought the nightclub's outdoor balcony had collapsed, so he stepped outside on his second-floor balcony.

"As soon as I stepped out, I knew I had heard metal on a body," he said. "There were people everywhere running and screaming."

Scott Jakota, a musician from Indiana in town to play SXSW, said he was one of the first people hit. He said the driver "gunned" the car.

"I was thrown up in the sky," Jakota said.

The driver continued down Red River and hit a bicyclist, two people on a moped and a taxi at 11th Street before striking a van and trying to run away, Acevedo said.

The second person on the moped was in good condition, he said.

Acevedo said authorities are still investigating, and asked witnesses and those who may have taken video to contact police rather than post it on the Internet.

The festival will continue, SXSW managing director Roland Swenson said Thursday morning.

"It would cause more problems for people to show up and be turned away than to carry on," Swenson said.

One bouquet of flowers sat by a telephone pole in front of The Mohawk. Daytime concerts there and next door had been canceled, though festivalgoers were still showing up expecting to see bands.

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Associated Press writers Chris Tomlinson in Austin and Andale Gross in Chicago contributed to this report.

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