The Guardian Australia

Alec Baldwin will be arraigned on new charges in fatal shooting on Rust film set

- Dani Anguiano in Los Angeles

Alec Baldwin will be arraigned in New Mexico today on a new involuntar­y manslaught­er charge over the fatal shooting of the cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins on the set of the movie Rust in 2021.

The actor was indicted earlier this month in the shooting, nearly a year after prosecutor­s dropped similar charges against him. At the time, the prosecutor­s’ office said that they would continue investigat­ing the matter and that they could refile charges.

They brought the case before the grand jury in Santa Fe earlier this month, alleging that Baldwin caused Hutchins’ death either by negligence or “total disregard or indifferen­ce” for safety. The grand jury opted to indict.

Baldwin, who also served as a coproducer on the western drama, was pointing a gun at Hutchins during an October 2021 rehearsal when the weapon fired, hitting her and wounding the film’s director, Joel Souza. Hutchins died at a nearby hospital.

Baldwin has said that he pulled back the hammer of the gun before it fired, but that he did not pull the trigger. In a 2021 interview, he said he had believed the weapon had been safe and loaded with blanks, and denied responsibi­lity for the shooting.

“I feel someone is responsibl­e for what happened, but I know it isn’t me. I might have killed myself if I thought I was responsibl­e, and I don’t say that lightly,” he said.

The prosecutio­n’s case centers on his role as an actor holding the weapon as well as his role as a co-producer with legal responsibi­lity for production safety.

Prosecutor­s had previously dropped charges against Baldwin based on evidence that the hammer of the revolver might have been modified, allowing it to fire without the trigger being pulled.

But an independen­t forensic test commission­ed by prosecutor­s concluded that Baldwin would have had to have pulled the trigger of the revolver for it to have fired the live round that struck Hutchins in the chest and killed her.

“Although Alec Baldwin repeatedly denies pulling the trigger, given the tests, findings and observatio­ns reported here, the trigger had to be pulled or depressed sufficient­ly to release the fully cocked or retracted hammer of the evidence revolver,” the analysis states.

Baldwin’s defense has described the situation as a “terrible tragedy” that “has been turned into this misguided prosecutio­n”.

“We look forward to our day in court,” Luke Nikas and Alex Spiro, defense attorneys for Baldwin, said earlier this month in response to news of the indictment.

David Halls, the film’s assistant director who handed the weapon to Baldwin, was sentenced to a six-month suspended sentence with unsupervis­ed probation, a $500 fine, 24 hours of community service and a firearms safety class on a charge of negligent use of a deadly weapon in connection with the case.

The movie’s chief weapons handler, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, who had handled the gun before Halls, has also been charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er and faces trial this year.

Baldwin and his co-producers also face civil lawsuits seeking financial compensati­on, including from members of the Rust crew. The actor reached an undisclose­d settlement with Hutchins’ family in 2022.

The Rust Movie Production­s company paid a $100,000 fine to workplace safety regulators in New Mexico.

The film resumed production in April of last year with Matthew Hutchins, the husband of the late cinematogr­apher, as an executive producer.

 ?? ?? Alec Baldwin in New York City on 22 June 2021. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images
Alec Baldwin in New York City on 22 June 2021. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images
 ?? ?? Halyna Hutchins at the Sundance film festival on 19 January 2018 in Park City, Utah. Photograph: Mat Hayward/Getty Images for AMC Networks
Halyna Hutchins at the Sundance film festival on 19 January 2018 in Park City, Utah. Photograph: Mat Hayward/Getty Images for AMC Networks

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