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New Details Emerge In Alec Baldwin Shooting Case

Hannah Gutierrez-Reed leaves the courtroom during a break in her trial on involuntary manslaughter and tampering with evidence charges in Santa Fe, N.M., Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024. (Gabriela Campos/Sant

Courtroom testimony in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer by Alec Baldwin has shed new light on the events leading up to the tragic incident on the set of the Western movie 'Rust.' The assistant director, who served as the safety coordinator on set, testified that the weapons supervisor twice handed a revolver to Baldwin during rehearsal. The revolver was initially emptied of bullets, then loaded with dummy rounds and a live round.

The shooting occurred on October 20, 2021, resulting in the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and the injury of director Joel Souza. Baldwin, who was the lead actor and co-producer on 'Rust,' is facing involuntary manslaughter charges and is scheduled for trial in July.

The assistant director's testimony may play a crucial role in reconstructing the events that led to the shooting. He described a safety check where the weapons supervisor loaded dummy rounds into the revolver before handing it to Baldwin. The assistant director admitted negligence in not thoroughly checking the gun for live rounds.

Revolver was initially emptied, then loaded with dummy and live rounds.
The assistant director testified about revolver handling during rehearsal.
Shooting resulted in death of cinematographer and injury of director.
Baldwin faces involuntary manslaughter charges and trial in July.
Assistant director admitted negligence in gun safety check.
Conflicting accounts on who handed the gun to Baldwin.
Cinematographer expressed inability to feel legs after being shot.

There are conflicting accounts regarding who handed the gun to Baldwin, with both the weapons supervisor and the assistant director providing different versions of events. The assistant director recounted the moment of the shooting, stating that the cinematographer expressed an inability to feel her legs after being shot.

Defense attorneys argue that the safety issues on set were beyond the weapons supervisor's control and have raised concerns about evidence collection and investigation procedures. Prosecutors, on the other hand, hold the weapons supervisor responsible for bringing live ammunition on set and disregarding safety protocols.

In a separate testimony, a movie props supervisor admitted to discarding dummy ammunition rounds from other guns used on set in a state of shock and panic following the shooting. The ongoing trial continues to unravel the sequence of events that led to the tragic shooting on the 'Rust' movie set.

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