Alec Baldwin's involuntary manslaughter trial begins with differences over who's responsible for safety on set - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 25, 2024, 04:03 AM | Calgary | -17.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Alec Baldwin's involuntary manslaughter trial begins with differences over who's responsible for safety on set

A prosecutor says Alec Baldwin 'violated the cardinal rules of firearm safety' in opening statements at his involuntary manslaughter trial in New Mexico. Prosecutor Erlinda Johnson gave the prosecution's opening Wednesday.

Actor is on trial for October 2021 shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins

A man wearing a suit looks over his shoulder.
Actor Alec Baldwin listens during opening arguments of his trial in Santa Fe County District Court, in Santa Fe, N.M., on Wednesday. Baldwin is facing a single charge of involuntary manslaughter in the October 2021 death of a cinematographer. (Ross D. Franklin/The Associated Press)

Opening arguments in Alec Baldwin's involuntary manslaughter trial began on Wednesday with both sides focusing on questions of film set and gun safety integral points that will continue to be examined throughout the case.

Speaking first, special prosecutorErlinda Ocampo Johnson toldjurors in a Santa Fe, N.M., courtroom thatBaldwin "violated the cardinal rules of firearm safety" on the set ofRust.

Baldwin, who starred in and co-produced the Western, was holding a gun that went off during a rehearsal of a scene, striking and killingcinematographer Halyna Hutchins, 26,inOctober 2021. Director Joel Souzawas also wounded when the gun went off.

Opening statements from Johnson andBaldwin's lawyer, Alex Spiro, both doveinto who was to blame for those agreed-upon facts.

Johnson's statements touched on Baldwin's alleged cavaliermisuse of the gun in question,a general lack of safety on the filmset and the claim that the gun would not have gone off without its trigger being pulled something the actor has repeatedly denied.

"The evidence will show that someone who played make believe with a real gun and violated the cardinal rules of firearm safety is the defendant, Alexander Baldwin," Johnson said.

WATCH | There were 'fundamental safety violations' on Rust set, former prosecutor says:

'Fundamental safety violations' on Rust set, says former prosecutor

2 years ago
Duration 8:31
Matt Long, a former prosecutor specializing in gun and violent crime, says that even though Alec Baldwin could face up to 18 months in prison for his role in the fatal shooting on the Rust film set, 'lifelong consequences' could follow the actor.

Spiro, in his opening comments to the jury, said"these cardinal rules, they're not cardinal rules on a movie set" and argued that handling a weapon is a normal part of thatparticular workplace.

Spiro also alluded to two questions that will be a defining aspect of the trial: whether the gun a replica of an 1873 revolver malfunctionedand whether Baldwin intentionally pulled the trigger.

Spiro pushed back on Johnson's arguments that subsequent tests found the gun was in good working order andfocused on Baldwin's role as anactor a job whose responsibilities, Spiro argued, do not include ensuring the safety of weapons.

"The evidence will show that on a movie set, safety has to occur before a gun is placed in an actor's hand," Spiro told the jury.

Propor gun?

That discussion will likely continue to rear its head in theproceedingsand already has made animpact.

"The narrow issue really is ... is this firearm a prop, or is it a real gun," Arizona trial attorney and former prosecutor Matthew Long told CBC News. "Thatreally seems to be the the narrow question that both sides are focusing on."

Long said that arguments will come out as the defence seeks to show Baldwin was acting with a reasonable amount of safety for an actor on a movie set.The prosecution, he said, has a higher bar to clear: that, despite being an actor who believed he was holding a prop,when Baldwin pointed the gun he had the same responsibilities as someone would off of a movie set.

"Their burden and I think it's an extremely challenging one to overcome is in this context, was there a real risk of death, and did [Baldwin] willfully disregard that risk?" Long said."And what the prosecutor's essentially saying is, 'Gun safety principles apply everywhere, including here.'"

A bearded man standing in a parking lot speaks on a cellphone.
Baldwin speaks on the phone in the parking lot outside the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office after he was questioned about a shooting on the set of the film Rust on the outskirts of Santa Fe, N.M., on Oct. 21, 2021. (Jim Weber/Santa Fe New Mexican/The Associated Press)

On Wednesday, that debate began asSpiro and Johnson disagreed over the culpability of the film's armourer,Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in April. She is currently serving an 18-month sentence, though is appealing that verdict.

Johnson argued that Baldwin failed to do a safety check with Gutierrez-Reed, and that meant it went unnoticed thatthe guncontained a live round instead of blanks.

It was Baldwin's lack of concern for on-set safety protocolsand an unwillingnessto do a safety check with Gutierrez-Reed, because "he didn't want to offend her," that led to Hutchins's death, Johnson said.

"The evidence will show, ladies and gentlemen, that like in many workplaces, there are people who act in a reckless manner and place other individuals in danger and act without due regard for the safety of others," she said. "That, you will hear, was the defendant Alexander Baldwin."

An actor's sole job is to act, defence says

Earlier Wednesday,Judge Mary Marlowe Sommeragreed with the defence that Baldwin's role as co-producer onRusthad no relevance to the caseafter Johnson tried, unsuccessfully, to argue that Baldwin was "keenly aware" of his safety obligations as a co-producer and bore a special responsibility beyond that of an actorfor the dangerous environment on set that led to the shooting.

Spiro's opening statements on Wednesday, which ran roughly 10 minutes longer than Johnson's, focused on that distinction.

He said it was armourer Gutierrez-Reed who loaded the live round into the gun, and Baldwin didexactly what actors always do on the set of the film: handle a gun as directed once beingtold it is safe.

"Never the witnesses will tell you in history is [that] something that an actor has done:intercepted a live bullet from a prop gun," Spiro said."No actor in history no one could have imagined or expectedan actor to do that."

First witness takes the stand

The first witness to take the stand Wednesday, law enforcement officer Nicholas LeFleur, spoke mostly about Baldwin's actions after the shooting. As the first officer to arrive on scene, footage captured by LeFleur's body camera that day was played to the court along with additional footage from a Santa Fe county sheriff's deputy.

The video showed frantic efforts to save Hutchins'slife and, later,LeFleur's instructions to Baldwin not to talk to any potential witnesses something Baldwin repeatedly does.

One portion of the video showsBaldwin sitting in the back of a truck, speaking with two other men. As LeFleur walks up, Baldwin can be heard to say, "She's handing me an empty gun."

A man wearing a shirt and tie sits in front of a microphone on a desk. Behind him is a screen showing a man wearing a vest.
Law enforcement officer Nicholas LeFleur testifies during actor Alec Baldwin's hearing in Santa Fe County District Court, on Wednesday. (Ross D. Franklin/The Associated Press)

Questioned by the prosecution, LeFleur said that the setupconcerned him.

"Why does that concern you?"special prosecutor Kari Morrissey asked LeFleur.

"It could essentially coerce testimony," he said. "People would say the same thing because theother person said it, rather than them saying their own opinion their own view of what they saw."

Later, Spiro pressed LeFleur on why he left the word "accidental" out of his description of the shooting call during his questioning by the prosecution. LeFleur said it was not intentional.

And LeFleur acknowledged that in a pretrial interview he said the circumstances of the scene suggested that Baldwin's actions were unintentional.

WATCH | Prosecutors accuse Baldwin of being reckless:

Prosecutors call Alec Baldwin lax on gun safety as Rust shooting trial begins

2 months ago
Duration 2:10
Prosecutors painted Rust actor Alec Baldwin as headstrong and lax on gun safety as his involuntary manslaughter trial got underway. Baldwins lawyers say he had no reason to believe there were live rounds in the prop gun that went off, killing cinematographer Halyna Hutchins in 2021.

Baldwin, who has pleaded not guilty, sat surrounded by his lawyers in the downtown Santa Fe courthouse a short drive from the movie-ranch setting of scenes from Rust.He watched the proceedings silently, occasionally taking notes on a legal pad.

Attorney Gloria Allred sat in the front row of the courtroom audience, a reminder of Baldwin's other legal difficulties. Allred is representing Rustscript supervisor Mamie Mitchell and Hutchins's sister and parents in a civil lawsuit against Baldwin and other producers.

With files from Eli Glasner and The Associated Press