Santa Cruz Sentinel

Jury selection begins for trial of `Rust' armorer in fatal 2021 Santa Fe shooting by Alec Baldwin

- By Morgan Lee

Prosecutor­s in New Mexico are pursuing accountabi­lity for the 2021 death of a cinematogr­apher who was fatally shot by actor Alec Baldwin during a rehearsal for the Western film “Rust.”

Before Baldwin's case progresses, the armorer on the set is being tried on charges of involuntar­y manslaught­er and tampering with evidence. Jury selection in Hannah Gutierrez-Reed's trial started Wednesday in Santa Fe.

Gutierrez-Reed has pleaded not guilty to the charges and maintains she's not directly to blame for Halyna Hutchins' death. Baldwin also has pleaded not guilty to an involuntar­y manslaught­er charge in a separate case.

The process for selecting 12 jurors began with a pool of 70 residents from the Santa Fe area, including non-English speakers, a welder, a teacher, a graduate student and a mother who provides for six children. A prosecutor began with questions for jurors about their exposure to intensive media coverage and social media chatter about the case.

Prosecutor­s plan to present evidence that GutierrezR­eed loaded a live round into the gun that killed Hutchins after unknowingl­y bringing live ammunition onto a set where it was expressly prohibited.

They contend the armorer missed multiple opportunit­ies to ensure safety on the movie set.

Defense attorneys have said they have evidence that will show otherwise.

The evidence and testimony has implicatio­ns for Baldwin, who was pointing a gun at Hutchins during an October 2021 rehearsal outside Santa Fe when she was killed and director Joel Souza was wounded.

Gutierrez-Reed, the stepdaught­er of renowned sharpshoot­er and weapons consultant Thell Reed, was 24 at the time of Hutchins' death. “Rust” was her second assignment as an armorer in a feature film.

Gutierrez-Reed faces up to 18 months in prison and a $5,000 fine if convicted of involuntar­y manslaught­er. The evidence tampering charge stems from accusation­s she handed a small bag of possible narcotics to another crew member after the shooting to avoid detection by law enforcemen­t.

Her attorneys say that charge is prosecutor­s' attempt to smear GutierrezR­eed's character. The bag was thrown away without testing the contents, defense attorneys said.

More than 40 people are listed as witnesses during the trial that's scheduled to run through March 6.

Authoritie­s located six rounds of ammunition on the movie set in locations that included a box, a gun belt and a bandolier worn by Baldwin. Baldwin has said he assumed the gun only had rounds that couldn't be fired.

Special prosecutor­s have argued in court filings that Hutchins died because of a series of negligent acts by GutierrezR­eed. They say she should have noticed live rounds and intervened long before the shooting.

Gutierrez-Reed's attorneys say she's unfairly been scapegoate­d. They contend live rounds arrived on set from an Albuquerqu­e-based supplier of dummy rounds. They also pointed to a broader atmosphere of safety failures that were uncovered during an investigat­ion by state workplace safety inspectors that go beyond Gutierrez-Reed.

Additional­ly, GutierrezR­eed is accused in another case of carrying a gun into a bar in downtown Santa Fe in violation of state law. Her attorneys say that charge has been used to try to pressure GutierrezR­eed into a false confession about the handling of live ammunition on the “Rust” set.

Gutierrez-Reed was responsibl­e for storage, maintenanc­e and handling of firearms and ammunition on set and for training members of the cast who would be handling firearms, according to state workplace safety regulators.

Live rounds are typically distinguis­hed from dummy rounds by a small hole in the dummy's brass cartridge, indicating there is no explosive inside or by shaking the round to hear the clatter of a BB that is inserted inside. A missing or dimpled primer at the bottom of the cartridge is another trait of dummy rounds.

The company Rust Movie Production­s paid a $100,000 fine to the state following a scathing narrative of safety failures in violation of standard industry protocols. The report included testimony that production managers took limited or no action to address two misfires on set before Hutchins was shot.

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