'Rust' armorer sentenced to 18 months in fatal shooting by Alec Baldwin
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[April 16, 2024]
By Andrew Hay
SANTA FE, New Mexico (Reuters) -Hannah Gutierrez, the chief weapons
handler for the Western movie "Rust," was sentenced to 18 months in
prison on Monday in the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, who
was shot when actor Alec Baldwin was handling a gun during the film's
production in 2021.
In March, Gutierrez, 27, was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter
for mistakenly loading a live round into a revolver Baldwin was using on
a Santa Fe, New Mexico, movie set.
"You alone turned a safe weapon into a lethal weapon," Judge Mary
Marlowe Sommer told Gutierrez as she handed down the sentence.
In video calls and the courtroom during the hearing, Hutchins' friends
from the film industry paid tribute to her creativity and kindness. They
also lambasted Gutierrez's breaches in firearms safety protocol.
"I struggle to deal with this repeatedly being called an accident,
because it was not an accident, it was negligence," said Jen White, a
film industry colleague.
The shooting, which stunned Hollywood, is believed to be the first time
in modern times that a member of a film crew or cast was killed by a
live round accidentally loaded into a gun.
Baldwin's trial is set for July 10 after a grand jury indicted him on a
charge of involuntary manslaughter in January.
Gutierrez's lawyer Jason Bowles had requested she be given probation,
but prosecutors argued for a full 18 months due to lack of contrition.
"I beg you please don't give me more time," Gutierrez told the court,
adding that her "heart ached" for Hutchins' family "The jury has found
me at fault for this tragedy but that doesn't make me a monster that
makes me human."
In a video call from Kiev the Ukraine-born cinematographer's mother
mourned her daughter's death and her young grandson Andros being left
without a mother.
"It's the hardest thing to lose a child," said Olga Solovey, whose
comments were translated into English in subtitles.
Prosecutor Kari Morrissey pointed to phone calls by Gutierrez from jail
in which she said the jurors were "idiots," the judge had been "paid
off," and she continued to blame Baldwin and others for the shooting.
Gutierrez had already spent a month in Santa Fe county jail following
her conviction.
THREE-WEEK TRIAL
On March 6, a Santa Fe jury took less than two hours to find her guilty.
One juror afterwards said Gutierrez had not done her job to ensure
weapons safety on set.
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Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, the former armorer at the movie Rust, stands
in front of the judge as she listens during her sentencing hearing
in First District Court, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S., April 15,
2024. Luis Sanchez Saturno/Pool via REUTERS
Hutchins' death initially prompted
U.S. film and television productions to stop using real firearms and
blank ammunition. Two and a half years later, many are using them
again because of the realistic effects they produce, according to
armorers.
Hutchins was fatally shot when Baldwin pointed his gun at the
cinematographer and cocked the weapon as she set up a scene.
During Gutierrez's three-week trial, prosecutors accused her of
unknowingly bringing live Colt .45 rounds onto the set of the
low-budget movie, something that has been strictly forbidden for
nearly a century under Screen Actors Guild safety guidelines.
Bowles said Gutierrez was the scapegoat for a chaotic production
where she was not given time to check weapons. He blamed Hutchins'
death on reckless use of firearms by Baldwin and his efforts to rush
and control the filming. Baldwin was also a producer and writer on
the movie.
Attorney Gloria Allred, representing Hutchins' parents and sister in
a lawsuit against Baldwin, said she supported his criminal
prosecution.
"Mr Baldwin has done everything he could to try to dismiss the case
but at this point it appears that trial is going forward," Allred
told reporters outside the courthouse.
The "30 Rock" actor denies pulling the trigger and said he had been
directed to aim it at the camera. But the FBI and an independent
firearms expert found the gun would not fire without the trigger
depressed.
Film historians such as Alan Rode have look to back to the early
part of the last century to find examples of Hollywood cast or crew
killed by live rounds accidentally loaded into guns.
Previous on-set fatal shootings of actors Brandon Lee in 1993 and
Jon-Erik Hexum in 1984 involved blank rounds.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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