Prosecutors may charge Alec Baldwin in 'Rust' shooting - Los Angeles Times
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New Mexico district attorney may charge Alec Baldwin in ‘Rust’ shooting

A New Mexico district attorney signals she may charge actor-producer Alec Baldwin and three other people in the fatal shooting on the set of ‘Rust.’

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A New Mexico district attorney could file criminal charges against four people, including actor Alec Baldwin, for the fatal shooting on the movie set of “Rust.”

In a recent letter to the state’s finance board, Santa Fe Dist. Atty. Mary Carmack-Altwies said as many as four people could face criminal charges in connection with the accident last year that claimed the life of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injured director Joel Souza.

Alec Baldwin pulled the trigger, the FBI concludes. But the agency’s review doesn’t answer key questions, including where the live bullets came from.

Aug. 15, 2022

The district attorney said that her office is considering charges including homicide as well as gun violations, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported.

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“One of the possible defendants is well-known movie actor Alec Baldwin,” the district attorney wrote in a letter dated Aug. 30 and viewed by The Times. She did not identify other individuals who might be charged.

“If charges are warranted, the [1st Judicial District attorney] anticipates prosecuting up to four individuals. My expenses for the ‘Rust’ [case] will begin immediately and will be costly,” she wrote.

The emergency request for funding could not wait until the next legislative session because “the evidence has just been returned, the state is ready to make charging decisions in the ‘Rust’ case,” she wrote.

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Carmack-Altwies requested $635,500 for what she described as potentially four separate jury trials and to hire a special investigator, a media spokesperson and experts.

The state gave the district attorney’s office $317,000 for the appointment of a special prosecutor to oversee the case, according to the state office’s website.

The D.A. appointed Andrea Reeb as a special prosecutor.

Baldwin’s phone, one of the outstanding pieces of evidence in the case, has been handed over to prosecutors, ABC News reported.

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Baldwin’s attorney Luke Nikas of Quinn Emanuel warned against assuming his client will be charged.

“The DA has made clear that she has not received the sheriff’s report or made any decisions about who, if anyone, might be charged in this case,” Nikas said. “And during my communications with the DA’s office just a few weeks ago, after the August 30 funding request was submitted, I was told that it would be premature to discuss the case because they had not yet reviewed the file or deliberated about their charging decision.”

Interviews with multiple members of the “Rust” crew paint an hour- by-hour picture of a cascade of bad decisions that created a chaotic set on which a lead bullet was put into a prop gun.

Oct. 31, 2021

Baldwin has repeatedly denied culpability in the shooting.

Next month will mark a year since the accident on the set of the low-budget western as questions remain about how a live round ended up on the production, in violation of safety practices.

Last month, another piece of key evidence was delivered to police. A long-awaited FBI report, including an analysis of the weapon that Baldwin fired, concluded that the pistol “functioned normally when tested in the laboratory.”

The report noted that in order for the replica Pietta Colt .45 to fire, the trigger needed to be pulled. Those results appeared to cast doubt on Baldwin’s statements late last year to ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos that he did not pull the trigger.

However, Nikas, who was also a producer on the movie, said that the report’s conclusions had been “misconstrued.”

“The gun fired in testing only one time — without having to pull the trigger — when the hammer was pulled back and the gun broke in two different places,” Nikas said. “The FBI was unable to fire the gun in any prior test, even when pulling the trigger, because it was in such poor condition.”

Earlier this year Hutchins’ family filed a wrongful death suit against Baldwin, producers and members of the “Rust” production who they alleged breached “the most basic rules of firearm use on a film production.”

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The attorneys for the Hutchins family sued armorer Hannah Gutierrez Reed, who they said was responsible for maintaining the weapons on set and did not verify that the revolver or ammunition were safe before first assistant director Dave Halls handed the gun to Baldwin. The complaint also accuses Halls, a defendant in the suit, of failing to verify the revolver was safe.

Cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed on the set of “Rust” in October 2021. A judge dismissed the involuntary manslaughter case against star Alec Baldwin in July 2024.

Oct. 3, 2024

Baldwin blamed Gutierrez Reed and Halls for the tragedy in an interview with CNN last month.

A representative for Halls and Gutierrez Reed did not respond to requests for comment.

A New Mexico state agency levied its maximum fine on the producers behind “Rust” for safety violations, saying they demonstrated “plain indifference” to employee safety. Rust Movie Productions LLC has denied the allegations.

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