The Guardian (USA)

Alec Baldwin shooting: investigat­ors track source of live ammunition on Rust set

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Authoritie­s are pursuing new leads 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, 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 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 rehearsal on 21 October killed cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins and left a projectile lodged in the shoulder of director Joel Souza. 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 production. According to an affidavit from the Santa Fe County sheriff’s office, which is leading the investigat­ion, Kenney told a detective on 29 October that a few years previously, he had received “‘reloaded ammunition’ from a friend”, and that the ammunition stood out in his memory because of a star-shaped company logo.

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 armourer on the film, Hannah Gutierrez Reed, loaded the gun with five dummy rounds, but struggled to add a sixth 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 [the firearm] too much’, due to it being locked up at lunch,” according to the new affidavit.

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

 ?? Photograph: MEGA/GC Images ?? Alec Baldwin seen in Manchester, Vermont in October.
Photograph: MEGA/GC Images Alec Baldwin seen in Manchester, Vermont in October.

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