Baldwin had no reason to fire: Lawsuit
LOS ANGELES: A lawsuit filed on Wednesday alleges that Alec Baldwin recklessly fired a gun when it wasn’t called for in the script when he shot and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injured director Joel Souza on the New Mexico set of the film Rust. “There was nothing in the script about the gun being discharged by defendant Baldwin or by any other person,” the lawsuit from script supervisor Mamie Mitchell says.
The lawsuit is the second to stem from the shooting, with many more expected.
Like last week’s from head of lighting Serge Svetnoy, it was filed in Los Angeles Superior Court and names many defendants including Baldwin, who was both star and a producer; David Halls, the assistant director who handed Baldwin the gun; and Hannah Gutierrez Reed, who was in charge of weapons on the set.
Mitchell’s lawsuit focuses mainly on Baldwin’s actions. It said she was standing next to Hutchins and within 1.22m of the actor, and was stunned when he fired the gun inside the tiny church on Bonanza Creek Ranch on October 21.
According to discussions before the scene was filmed, it called for three tight shots of Baldwin: One on his eyes, one on a blood stain on his shoulder, and one on his torso as he pulled the gun from a holster, the lawsuit says.
There was no call for Baldwin to point the gun towards Hutchins and Souza, nor to fire it, the lawsuit says. And it alleges Baldwin violated protocol by not checking the gun more carefully. “Mr Baldwin chose to play Russian roulette when he fired a gun without checking it, and without having the armourer do so in his presence,” Mitchell’s attorney Gloria Allred said at a news conference.