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Baldwin shooting: assistant director admits didn't fully check gun

By AFP - Oct 28,2021 - Last updated at Oct 28,2021

US actor Alec Baldwin said he is cooperating with police investigating the killing of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins (AFP photo by Angela Weiss)

By Nick Layman
Agence France-Presse

SANTA FE, California — The man who handed Alec Baldwin the gun that killed a cinematographer admitted he didn't fully check it, documents revealed Wednesday, as the sheriff investigating the fatal shooting spoke of "complacency" on the US movie set.

Halyna Hutchins died after Baldwin shot her with the Colt .45 he was pointing at a camera for low-budget western "Rust" being filmed in New Mexico.

The live round passed through her torso and struck director Joel Souza in the shoulder. 

Assistant director Dave Halls told detectives he remembers seeing ammunition in the period weapon before he handed it to Baldwin. Moviemakers sometimes use inert, or dummy, bullets in props.

"He advised he should have checked all of them, but didn't, and couldn't recall if [armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed] spun the drum" to show him what was inside the gun, an affidavit says.

Halls handed Baldwin the weapon using the phrase "cold gun" — industry lingo for an inert firearm.

An investigation into last Thursday's fatal shooting has recovered 500 rounds of ammunition from the set, Sheriff Adan Mendoza told reporters, adding that detectives believe they were a mix of blanks, dummies and live rounds.

Entertainment trade website The Wrap reported this week that crew members had been using prop weapons just hours before Hutchins was killed, shooting at tin cans for target practice.

"We have recovered what we believe to be possible additional live rounds on set," Mendoza said.

"We're going to determine how those got there, why they were there, because they shouldn't have been there.

"I think there was some complacency on this set," he added.

As the film's armorer, Gutierrez-Reed, 24, would have been responsible for supplying and keeping weapons safe on set, ensuring that they are accounted for at all times and locked away when not in use.

She told detectives that on the day of the incident guns were secured while the crew ate lunch, but that ammunition was not, according to the affidavit.

Mendoza told reporters more questions were being asked of the people who "inspected or handled the firearm... before it got to Mr Baldwin."

"We're going to try to determine exactly how that happened and if they should have known that there was a live round in that firearm."

"Rust" crew members had complained about lax on-set protocols, and a gun was mistakenly fired at least twice on set in the days before Hutchins' death, multiple US outlets have reported.

It emerged this week that Halls had been sacked as assistant director of a previous production because of a gun safety violation that had resulted in a minor injury to a crew member.

Santa Fe district attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies said context such as this might affect any eventual decision to prosecute in the "Rust" shooting.

"It obviously could play into whether charges get filed or not," she said.

Asked whether Emmy Award-winning Baldwin — who also served as a producer on the movie — could face criminal charges, she said it was not out of the question.

"All options are on the table. No one has been ruled out at this point," she told a press conference.

Legal experts told AFP that despite there being no doubt that Baldwin, 63, pulled the trigger, he is unlikely to be charged with a crime.

"[Baldwin] appears to have reasonably believed that this was not a loaded weapon," said University of Southern California law professor Gregory Keating. This fact would leave him some way short of being culpable for involuntary manslaughter.

More likely, said legal consultant Bryan Sullivan, Baldwin and his fellow producers — there are 12 people credited with variations of this role — are likely to face action for civil damages.

"I anticipate that everybody's going to be sued," he said.

Baldwin is expected to be named in any lawsuit because of his deep pockets, and because his fame would help draw media coverage, according to Sullivan.

"A plaintiff's lawyer would definitely want to name Alec Baldwin to get the money in there," he added.

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