Malvern Daily Record

Investigat­ors track ammunition in fatal film set shooting

- By Morgan Lee

Authoritie­s pursued new leads Tuesday on possible sources of live ammunition involved in actor Alec Baldwin’s fatal shooting of a cinematogr­apher on the New Mexico set of a western movie, as they searched the premises of an Albuquerqu­e-based firearms and ammunition supplier.

The search took place after a provider of firearms and ammunition to the ill fated movie production for “Rust” told investigat­ors that he “may know” where live rounds came from, describing ammunition he received from a friend in the past that had been “reloaded” by assembly from parts.

A revolver fired by Baldwin during a “Rust” rehearsal on Oct. 21 killed cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins and left a projectile lodged in the shoulder of director Joel Souza, for doctors later to remove. Baldwin was told the revolver was “cold” and had no live rounds, investigat­ors say.

Seth Kenney and his business PDQ Arm & Prop provided movie-prop ammunition and weapons to the “Rust” production. Kenney told a detective on Oct. 29 that “a couple years back, he received ‘reloaded ammunition’ from a friend,” and that the ammunition stood out in his memory because of a starshaped company logo, according to an affidavit from the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office that is leading the investigat­ion.

Kenney could not be reached independen­tly for comment. A sheriff’s office spokesman declined to elaborate on details in the search warrant.

Investigat­ors initially found 500 rounds of ammunition at the movie set on the outskirts of Santa Fe — a mix of blanks, dummy rounds and what appeared to be live rounds. Industry experts have said live rounds should never be on set.

Investigat­ors have described “some complacenc­y” in how weapons were handled on the “Rust” set. They have said it is too soon to determine whether charges will be filed, amid independen­t civil lawsuits concerning liability in the fatal shooting.

Tuesday’s search-warrant affidavit contains some new details about the handling and loading of the gun that killed Hutchins before it was handed to Baldwin by an assistant director.

Investigat­ors say that the armorer on the film, Hannah Gutierrez Reed, loaded the gun with five dummy rounds on Oct. 21, but struggled to add a sixth round before a lunch break, when the revolver was locked in a truck. The final round was added after lunch when the gun was cleaned.

Gutierrez Reed “stated the guns were checked on set, however she ‘didn’t really check it too much’ (the firearm), due to it being locked up at lunch,” according to the new affidavit.

Another movie crew member — the prop master for “Rust” — told investigat­ors that ammunition was purchased from at least three sources for the production.

Jason Bowles, an attorney for Gutierrez Reed, called the search for evidence in Albuquerqu­e a huge step forward toward determinin­g the source of ammunition on the “Rust” set.

Investigat­ors also described conversati­ons with Gutierrez Reed’s father — sharpshoot­er and movie consultant Thell Reed, who isn’t listed as a participan­t on “Rust.”

Thell Reed said that prior to the “Rust” production he supplied Kenney with a can of live ammunition, during a firing-range training session for film actors. Reed said Kenney took a can of that ammunition back to New Mexico.

After the shooting, the prop master on the set shook a box of dummy rounds on the set for their characteri­stic rattle and said they did not rattle, possibly indicating live rounds.

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