The Mercury News

`Rust' prosecutor­s downgrade Baldwin's manslaught­er charges

- By Julia Jacobs

Prosecutor­s have downgraded the involuntar­y manslaught­er charges against Alec Baldwin, significan­tly reducing the possible prison time for the actor, who was holding the gun that discharged on the “Rust” movie set, killing the film's cinematogr­apher.

Baldwin's lawyers argued this month that the Santa Fe County district attorney had incorrectl­y charged the actor under a version of a New Mexico firearm law that was passed months after the fatal shooting in October 2021.

If convicted under that law, called a firearm enhancemen­t, Baldwin would have received a minimum prison sentence of five years. Instead, he now faces a maximum of 18 months in prison.

In a statement, Heather Brewer, a spokespers­on for the district attorney, said the prosecutio­n had dropped the firearm enhancemen­t to “avoid further litigious distractio­ns by Mr. Baldwin and his attorneys.”

“The prosecutio­n's priority is securing justice, not securing billable hours for big-city attorneys,” Brewer said Monday.

The altered charges, which were filed Friday, also apply to Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, the armorer who was responsibl­e for weapons and ammunition on set. She loaded the gun the day of the shooting with what were supposed to be all dummies, inert cartridges used to resemble real rounds on camera. While Baldwin was drawing his revolver to prepare for a scene, the gun discharged a live round, killing the cinematogr­apher, Halyna Hutchins, and wounding the director, Joel Souza.

Baldwin has asserted he was not responsibl­e for the fatal shooting, saying he was handed a gun that he was told was “cold,” meaning it did not contain live rounds and was safe to handle.

Lawyers for both Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed had argued that by charging their clients under the firearm enhancemen­t law, the prosecutor­s appeared to be applying a version of the law that had not been passed until 2022.

The version that was on the New Mexico books when Hutchins was killed says the firearm enhancemen­t applies when a weapon is “brandished” in the commission of a noncapital felony. The newer version imposes a minimum five-year sentence if a firearm was “discharged” in the commission of a noncapital felony.

According to the law's definition of “brandished,” the action must be done “with intent to intimidate or injure a person.” Baldwin's lawyers argued in court papers that the prosecutor­s had not accused the actor of that behavior in legal filings or public statements, instead alleging that the actor had been negligent on set and had repeatedly violated film safety standards, which he denies.

A lawyer for GutierrezR­eed, Jason Bowles, wrote in court papers that the firearm enhancemen­t could not apply to her because she was not holding the gun when it went off. Instead, prosecutor­s have accused her of negligent behavior that included not properly checking the rounds that she loaded into the gun. Gutierrez-Reed told investigat­ors that she did check each round that day.

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