Hannah Gutierrez-Reed filed a lawsuit in New Mexico court that claims the actor ignored a request to attend a “cross draw” session in the week leading up to the tragedy.The inexperienced armourer also pointed the finger at assistant director David Halls for failing to follow set protocol when he allegedly handed Baldwin the weapon without first calling on her to inspect it, according to the lawsuit.The 24-year-old is suing Seth Kenney and his company PDQ Arm and Prop LLC for allegedly supplying the deadly bullet. Baldwin is not named as a defendant in the suit.According to a report in the New York Post, Gutierrez-Reed claimed in a fiery 24-page lawsuit that Seth Kenney, who owns PDQ Media Arm & Prop, made “false representations” and caused “live rounds to be introduced on the New Mexico movie set.”The suit alleges another prop assistant brought in a new box of .45-caliber Long Colt rounds from Kenney’s shop the day of the shooting on Oct. 21. Gutierrez-Reed said she thought the rounds from that box were blanks, but no one has since acknowledged where the box came from.Baldwin was told that the gun was “cold,” indicating that the weapon contained only dummy bullets, but a live bullet inside the weapon struck and killed Hutchins as she was setting up a close-up shot of the actor, the suit alleges. Director Joel Souza was also hurt by the bullet after it exited Hutchins’ body.Gutierrez-Reed said on the day of the shooting, she and two other prop assistants, handled the guns out of a safe. The armourer said she remembers cleaning the gun that Baldwin used and placed what she thought was another round from the dummy ammo box.“To the best of Hannah’s knowledge, the gun was now loaded with 6 dummy rounds,” according to the suit. “Indeed, Defendants as suppliers of prop ammunition to the Rust set, sold, distributed, and advertised its props as dummy ammunition and not live rounds. Hannah relied upon and trusted that Defendants would only supply dummy prop ammunition, or blanks, and no live rounds were ever to be on set.”Gutierrez-Reed said she spun the cylinder for the assistant director Dave Halls and showed him what she thought were loaded blank rounds. The armourer said Halls told her the gun was not going to be used for a scene or rehearsal, so she left the gun inside the church set while she attended to her other duties outside.Halls was supposed to alert the armourer if Baldwin or anyone else used the gun because she was required to reinspect the firearm under rules of the set, the lawsuit alleges. About 15 minutes later, Gutierrez-Reed claims Halls gave the firearm to Baldwin and called out, “cold gun,” which signified the firearm was empty or contained blank rounds.The armourer was not inside the church when Baldwin practised a cross-draw move from his shoulder holster and camera angles with Hutchins for an upcoming scene, the lawsuit said. Gutierrez-Reed maintained no one alerted her that the actor was practising with the gun, which Baldwin said “just went off”.“Had Hannah been called back in, she would have reinspected the weapon, and every round again, and instructed Baldwin on safe gun practice with the cross draw, as was her standard practice,” the lawsuit stated, adding the gun had been out of her possession for more than 15 minutes.“Hannah would never have let Baldwin point the weapon at Halyna, as part of standard safe gun practices,” the lawsuit said. “Apparently, no one inside the church stopped Baldwin from doing so, including AD Halls.”Gutierrez-Reed also alleged Kenney tried to shift the blame onto her, and that the ammunition business owner has tampered with the ongoing investigation.So far, no criminal charges have been filed against any crew member or others involved in the production of the movie.Two other crew members — lighting technician Serge Svetnoy and script supervisor Mamie Mitchell — have filed separate suits against Baldwin, producers and companies in charge of the film.Baldwin said last week that he would comply with the investigation but has yet to turn over his mobile phone to New Mexico police.– with the New York Post
from Daily Telegraph https://ift.tt/33fnrjy
January 13, 2022 at 11:07PM
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
Hannah Gutierrez-Reed filed a lawsuit in New Mexico court that claims the actor ignored a request to attend a “cross draw” session in the week leading up to the tragedy.The inexperienced armourer also pointed the finger at assistant director David Halls for failing to follow set protocol when he allegedly handed Baldwin the weapon without first calling on her to inspect it, according to the lawsuit.The 24-year-old is suing Seth Kenney and his company PDQ Arm and Prop LLC for allegedly supplying the deadly bullet. Baldwin is not named as a defendant in the suit.According to a report in the New York Post, Gutierrez-Reed claimed in a fiery 24-page lawsuit that Seth Kenney, who owns PDQ Media Arm & Prop, made “false representations” and caused “live rounds to be introduced on the New Mexico movie set.”The suit alleges another prop assistant brought in a new box of .45-caliber Long Colt rounds from Kenney’s shop the day of the shooting on Oct. 21. Gutierrez-Reed said she thought the rounds from that box were blanks, but no one has since acknowledged where the box came from.Baldwin was told that the gun was “cold,” indicating that the weapon contained only dummy bullets, but a live bullet inside the weapon struck and killed Hutchins as she was setting up a close-up shot of the actor, the suit alleges. Director Joel Souza was also hurt by the bullet after it exited Hutchins’ body.Gutierrez-Reed said on the day of the shooting, she and two other prop assistants, handled the guns out of a safe. The armourer said she remembers cleaning the gun that Baldwin used and placed what she thought was another round from the dummy ammo box.“To the best of Hannah’s knowledge, the gun was now loaded with 6 dummy rounds,” according to the suit. “Indeed, Defendants as suppliers of prop ammunition to the Rust set, sold, distributed, and advertised its props as dummy ammunition and not live rounds. Hannah relied upon and trusted that Defendants would only supply dummy prop ammunition, or blanks, and no live rounds were ever to be on set.”Gutierrez-Reed said she spun the cylinder for the assistant director Dave Halls and showed him what she thought were loaded blank rounds. The armourer said Halls told her the gun was not going to be used for a scene or rehearsal, so she left the gun inside the church set while she attended to her other duties outside.Halls was supposed to alert the armourer if Baldwin or anyone else used the gun because she was required to reinspect the firearm under rules of the set, the lawsuit alleges. About 15 minutes later, Gutierrez-Reed claims Halls gave the firearm to Baldwin and called out, “cold gun,” which signified the firearm was empty or contained blank rounds.The armourer was not inside the church when Baldwin practised a cross-draw move from his shoulder holster and camera angles with Hutchins for an upcoming scene, the lawsuit said. Gutierrez-Reed maintained no one alerted her that the actor was practising with the gun, which Baldwin said “just went off”.“Had Hannah been called back in, she would have reinspected the weapon, and every round again, and instructed Baldwin on safe gun practice with the cross draw, as was her standard practice,” the lawsuit stated, adding the gun had been out of her possession for more than 15 minutes.“Hannah would never have let Baldwin point the weapon at Halyna, as part of standard safe gun practices,” the lawsuit said. “Apparently, no one inside the church stopped Baldwin from doing so, including AD Halls.”Gutierrez-Reed also alleged Kenney tried to shift the blame onto her, and that the ammunition business owner has tampered with the ongoing investigation.So far, no criminal charges have been filed against any crew member or others involved in the production of the movie.Two other crew members — lighting technician Serge Svetnoy and script supervisor Mamie Mitchell — have filed separate suits against Baldwin, producers and companies in charge of the film.Baldwin said last week that he would comply with the investigation but has yet to turn over his mobile phone to New Mexico police.– with the New York Post

