Gulf Times

Baldwin charged for ‘reckless acts’ in Rust shooting

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Actor Alec Baldwin was charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er on Tuesday for showing a “reckless” disregard for safety that led to the fatal shooting of cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins on the set of the Western movie Rust in New Mexico in 2021, according to court documents.

District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies filed charges following months of speculatio­n as to whether she had evidence that Baldwin acted with criminal negligence when a revolver with which he was rehearsing fired a live round that killed Hutchins.

Baldwin and set armourer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed were each charged with two counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er. The most serious charge, which carries a potential sentence of five years in jail, would require prosecutor­s to convince a jury that Baldwin acted with wilful disregard for the safety of others.

A lawyer for Baldwin declined to comment. Gutierrez-Reed’s lawyer said the prosecutor had “completely misunderst­ood the facts and has reached the wrong conclusion­s.”

Baldwin’s case is remarkable in that there is little or no precedent for a Hollywood actor to face criminal charges for an onset shooting.

A statement of probable cause by the prosecutio­n’s special investigat­or, Robert Shilling, made clear Baldwin was being charged as an actor and producer on the low-budget movie.

Baldwin’s failure to get sufficient firearms training, check with the armourer whether the revolver was loaded, or address safety complaints from crew were cited by Shilling as some of his many “extremely reckless acts or reckless failures to act” in the 10-day period leading up to Hutchins’ death.

The 30 Rock actor has denied responsibi­lity for the shooting inside a movie-set church, saying Hutchins directed him to point the gun at the camera, he cocked the revolver but never pulled the trigger.

Baldwin said live ammunition should never have been allowed on the set and it was the job of Gutierrez-Reed and first assistant director Dave Halls to ensure the gun was unloaded, a position supported by many actors and the SAG-AFTRA union.

Videos from inside the church prior to the shooting show Baldwin with his finger on the trigger, Shilling said.

An FBI forensic test of the revolver found it “functioned normally” and would not fire without the trigger being pulled.

The prosecutio­n used Baldwin’s comments to media against him, saying the investigat­ion showed he deviated from firearm safety protocols that he laid out in television interviews.

“Baldwin would have been better served not making public statements about these incidents,” said Kate Mangels, an attorney with entertainm­ent law firm Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump Holley.

Still, prosecutor­s could face long odds convincing a jury Baldwin is criminally liable as he was assured the gun was not loaded and it will be difficult to blame him for all the movie’s alleged safety failures, legal analysts said

No other Rust producer has been charged.

Charging documents held Gutierrez-Reed responsibl­e for “allowing live ammunition on the set,” but did not accuse her of physically introducin­g them onto the production.

Gutierrez-Reed has said she brought two boxes of dummy rounds onto the set from a previous movie. Supply company PDQ Arms and Prop also provided dummy rounds and blanks. An FBI test found live long Colt .45 rounds taken from PDQ in Albuquerqu­e did not match those found at the movie set, including the round that killed Hutchins and wounded director Joel Souza.

As armourer responsibl­e for firearm safety and training, Gutierrez-Reed failed to provide sufficient instructio­n to Baldwin, check rounds loaded into the revolver or remain present in the rehearsal to ensure the actor did not point the weapon at Hutchins, the special investigat­or said.

Gutierrez-Reed has said she checked that the rounds were dummies before handing the gun to Halls and leaving the church due to Covid protocols. Halls then handed it to Baldwin, telling him it was a “cold gun,” meaning it did not contain an explosive charge, according to police.

Halls has signed a plea deal for a misdemeano­ur charge and is expected to cooperate with the prosecutio­n.

Gutierrez-Reed has said producers denied her requests for extra firearms training, including with Baldwin.

Gabrielle Pickle, line producer on the movie, on December 20 testified to New Mexico’s worker safety agency (OSHA) that all of Gutierrez-Reed’s requests for extra days for armourer duties were granted.

On December 7 GutierrezR­eed testified to OSHA that Baldwin’s lack of knowledge and “poor form” in using a revolver may have led to the discharge that killed Hutchins.

Her lawyer Jason Bowles said Halls, her senior in the production, was at fault for not calling Gutierrez-Reed back into the church to perform her armourer duties.

“We will fight these charges and expect that a jury will find Hannah not guilty,” he said in a statement.

The defendants face a court arraignmen­t, which can be done virtually, then a preliminar­y hearing where a judge will decide whether there is probable cause to move forward with a trial. Preliminar­y hearings are typically scheduled within 60 days of charges being filed.

 ?? ?? This file handout photo released April 25, 2022, courtesy of Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office and part of the investigat­ive files, shows actor Alec Baldwin being processed after the death of cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins at the Bonanza Creek Ranch in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on October 21, 2022. (AFP)
This file handout photo released April 25, 2022, courtesy of Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office and part of the investigat­ive files, shows actor Alec Baldwin being processed after the death of cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins at the Bonanza Creek Ranch in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on October 21, 2022. (AFP)

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