The Guardian Australia

Alec Baldwin sues Rust film staff involved in handling loaded gun

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Saying he wanted to clear his name, the actor Alec Baldwin on Friday sued people involved in handling and supplying the loaded gun that he was using when it fired and killed cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins during a 2021 filming accident in New Mexico.

Baldwin filed a cross-complaint in Los Angeles’s superior court alleging negligence against some of the people sued by a script supervisor, Mamie Mitchell. Among other things, it seeks a share of any damages that Mitchell may win from the people Baldwin names and asks that they pay for any damages assessed against him.

Mitchell was standing behind Hutchins, who died shortly after being wounded during setup for a scene in the western movie Rust at a film set ranch on the outskirts of Santa Fe on 21 October 2021.

Mitchell sued Baldwin, who was a producer on the film, the production company and many others involved for assault and negligence.

In his cross-complaint, Baldwin says that while working on camera angles with Hutchins during rehearsal for a scene, he pointed the gun in her direction and pulled back and released the hammer of the gun, which discharged.

The shot fatally wounded Hutchins and wounded the director, Joel Souza, in the shoulder.

The actor said neither he nor Hutchins had known the weapon contained a live round.

“This tragedy occurred on a movie set – not a gun range, not a battlefiel­d, not a location where even a remote possibilit­y should exist that a gun would contain live ammunition,“the lawsuit said.

Baldwin has maintained he was told the gun was safe and that he did not pull the trigger. But a recent FBI forensic report found the weapon could not have fired unless the trigger was pulled.

The actor’s lawsuit says: “More than anyone else on that set, Baldwin has been wrongfully viewed as the perpetrato­r of this tragedy. By these crossclaim­s, Baldwin seeks to clear his name.”

Baldwin’s cross-complaint says he has lost opportunit­ies and been fired from jobs because of the shooting and also “has suffered physically and emotionall­y from the grief caused by these events”.

The medical investigat­or’s office of New Mexico determined the shooting was an accident. However, prosecutor­s are reviewing the shooting to determine whether criminal charges should be filed.

In April, New Mexico’s bureau of occupation­al health and safety imposed the maximum fine of $137,000 against Rust Movie Production­s and distribute­d a scathing narrative of safety failures, including testimony that production managers took limited or no action to address two misfires of blank ammunition on set prior to the fatal shooting.

The company is challengin­g the fine.

Baldwin’s lawsuit alleges negligence by the armorer Hannah Guttierez-Reed; prop master Sarah Zachry; first assistant director and safety coordinato­r David Halls, who handed Baldwin the gun; and ammunition supplier Seth Kenney and his company, PDQ Arm & Prop, which also supplied prop weapons for the production.

All have previously denied responsibi­lity for the fatal shooting.

In October, Hutchins’s family announced they had agreed to settle another lawsuit against the actor and the movie’s producers, and producers said they aimed to restart the project in January.

A lawyer for Gutierrez-Reed, Jason Bowles, said he was reviewing Baldwin’s lawsuit. Attorneys for other defendants did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment, the New York Times reported.

 ?? ?? Brian Panish, left, an attorney for the family of Halyna Hutchins, speaks next to a portrait of Hutchins in February.
Brian Panish, left, an attorney for the family of Halyna Hutchins, speaks next to a portrait of Hutchins in February.

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