Baldwin's lawyers have filed motions to dismiss his indictment,
alleging prosecutorial misconduct, a failure to show the actor
committed a crime and destruction of evidence during testing of
the gun Baldwin was using during a rehearsal on the film's New
Mexico set.
Hutchins was shot with a live round after Baldwin pointed the
gun at her as she set up a camera. The "30 Rock" actor maintains
he did not pull the trigger, an assertion that has become
central to the case.
District court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer scheduled a 10:00 a.m.
virtual hearing on the defense motions Friday after which she is
expected to rule on them.
It may be Baldwin's last chance to avoid what Hollywood
historians regard as an unprecedented manslaughter trial of a
leading actor for an on-set death.
Marlowe Sommer sentenced "Rust" armorer Hannah Gutierrez to 18
months prison in April after a Santa Fe jury found her guilty of
involuntary manslaughter for loading the live round into the
reproduction Colt Single Action Army revolver Baldwin was
rehearsing with.
Should Baldwin's trial go ahead, it was set to start July 10.
Legal observers said it was unlikely that case would be thrown
out.
"While Baldwin has some strong facts on his side, there is
always a risk of conviction - just ask Hannah Gutierrez," said
criminal trial lawyer Rachel Fiset, who saw a "miniscule" chance
the indictment would be thrown out.
Business and entertainment litigator Tre Lovell said he did not
expect the actor to be convicted at trial if his attorneys
followed the legal pathway laid out in their motions.
New Mexico prosecutor Kari Morrissey has said in court filings
that Baldwin has "lied with impunity' about the shooting.
Baldwin's case involves the first on-set fatal shooting with a
live round mistaken for a dummy or blank round since Hollywood's
silent era, according to historian Alan Rode.
Hollywood on-set shootings have in the past been settled through
civil lawsuits, such as the last fatality in 1993 when Brandon
Lee was killed when a blank round dislodged a bullet stuck in a
revolver's barrel during filming of "The Crow."
(Reporting By Andrew Hay; editing by Donna Bryson and Aurora
Ellis)
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