Albuquerque Journal

Movie sets need gun oversight, not necessaril­y new laws

- BY GEORGE SKELTON LOS ANGELES TIMES (TNS)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — There’s a very simple answer to Alec Baldwin’s repeated question after he accidental­ly shot and killed a movie crew member.

The actor-producer kept asking: “What the (expletive) just happened?”

What happened was undeniable: Every basic rule of commonsens­e gun safety was broken.

The first principles of safe gun handling are:

■ Always assume the gun is loaded.

■ Never point a gun at something you don’t want to hit with a bullet.

■ Keep your finger off the trigger until you want to shoot.

My dad sternly lectured me and my brother on these tenets one Christmas long ago as he handed us our first guns: bolt action singleshot .22 rifles. The lecture came first, then the three of us walked behind the garage on our small citrus ranch in Ojai, set up a pile of logs, and we boys practiced safe shooting.

Baldwin must not have gotten the lesson, and neither did key members of the crew on the set of his “Rust” movie production near Santa Fe.

Or maybe they arrogantly assumed such rules don’t apply to movie sets because, well, guns there behave differentl­y than in the real world. No, firearms are the same deadly weapons everywhere.

Baldwin was rehearsing a shootout scene, playing an outlaw in 1880s Kansas. He pulled from his holster a loaded Colt .45 revolver that he’d been told was “cold” — unloaded — and fired. The lead bullet killed cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins, 42, penetratin­g through her and wounding director Joel Souza, 48.

Baldwin apparently had not checked the revolver’s chamber himself, and neither had the assistant director who handed it to him.

The actor-producer and crew members not only ignored universall­y recognized and practiced gun safety rules, but also violated the film industry’s own strong guidelines.

The first paragraph of the industry’s “Safety Bulletin #1” reads in capital letters:

“BLANKS CAN KILL. TREAT ALL FIREARMS AS THOUGH THEY ARE LOADED. ‘LIVE AMMUNITION’ IS NEVER TO BE USED NOR BROUGHT ONTO ANY STUDIO LOT OR STAGE.”

The bulletin, prepared by a labor-management committee, includes a list of 19 rules, including: “Refrain from pointing a firearm at anyone, including yourself … . NEVER place your finger on the trigger until you’re ready to shoot … . Know where and what your intended target is.”

But “Safety Bulletin #2” does allow for the possible use of real bullets. It reads, “there may be a very rare occasion when ‘LIVE AMMUNITION’ must be used to obtain an effect.” It lists several safety criteria.

There was no such occasion on the set of “Rust.” And no one has publicly explained how live ammo wound up in Baldwin’s revolver, or among the roughly 500 rounds of blanks, dummy shells (and bullets) seized by investigat­ors.

California Sen. Dave Cortese, D-San Jose, chairman of the Senate Labor Committee, has announced he’ll push legislatio­n to ban not only live ammunition, but also workable guns from film sets in California.

“Those working behind the scenes to entertain and bring joy to millions all over the world shouldn’t go to a set worrying if they will return home safely to their family,” he said in a statement. “Our entertainm­ent industry must do a better job of ensuring safe working conditions for crews.”

There were gripes among “Rust” crew members about workers’ safety.

When paparazzi tracked down Baldwin days after the Oct. 21 tragedy, he described it as a “one-in-a-trillion episode.”

Not really. There have been other accidental gunshot deaths on film sets in recent years.

Cortese disputes Baldwin’s characteri­zation.

“This wasn’t about chance. It was a series of five or six mistakes,” the lawmaker says. “That’s not chance. You only get one chance with a gun. You can’t be sloppy with firearms, and you can’t take chances.”

Cortese’s bill would ban from film sets all guns with firing pins. … (He) calls the industry’s gun safety guidelines “a paper tiger” because, as “Rust” proved, they can too easily be ignored. “You need some state penalty.”

The lawmaker doesn’t want to add bans on workable guns and live ammo to the penal code. He’d like them to be enforced by the state labor commission­er under the occupation­al safety and health act.

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