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Gun and ammunition evidence in focus as Alec Baldwin trial starts second day

Halyna Hutchins’ death and the wounding of director Joel Souza nearly three years ago sent shock waves through the film industry.

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Alec Baldwin sits in court (Ramsay de Give/Pool Photo via AP)

Prosecutors sought to cast Alec Baldwin as someone who flouts rules and has little regard for safety at the first day of his New Mexico trial in the shooting of a cinematographer.

Special prosecutor Erlinda Ocampo Johnson repeatedly referred to Baldwin playing “make-believe” with a revolver on the set of the film Rust, and said it led to very real danger and the death of Halyna Hutchins, whom she called “a vibrant 42-year-old rising star”.

Ms Ocampo Johnson told jurors in her opening statement on Wednesday that Baldwin “requested to be assigned the biggest gun available” and that during a training session for it, he had “people filming him while he’s running around shooting this gun”.

The prosecutor said behind-the-scenes video will show Baldwin casually disregarding basic firearm safety.

“You will see him using this gun as a pointer to point at people, point at things,” Ms Ocampo Johnson said.

“You will see him cock the hammer when he is not supposed to cock the hammer, you will see him put his finger on the trigger when his finger’s not supposed to be on the trigger.”

Baldwin-Set Shooting
Attorney Alex Spiro attends Alec Baldwin’s manslaughter trial (Ramsay de Give/Pool Photo via AP)

Hutchins’ death and the wounding of director Joel Souza nearly three years ago sent shock waves through the film industry.

The fatal shooting led to the felony involuntary manslaughter charge against Baldwin, the 66-year-old star of 30 Rock and frequent host of Saturday Night Live, that could result in up to 18 months in prison.

His wife Hilaria Baldwin, younger brother Stephen Baldwin and older sister Elizabeth Keuchler sat behind him in the gallery again on Thursday as the trial got off to a stumbling start on its second day.

Baldwin’s attorney Alex Spiro asked crime scene technician Marissa Poppell detailed questions about how she collected and handled the gun and the live rounds that somehow ended up on the set, but he was frequently interrupted by objections from the prosecution and subsequent sidebars with the judge.

The day’s testimony was expected to focus largely on the collection of evidence and the revolver Baldwin used.

Seated in two rows of eight each, jurors and alternate jurors scrawled notes as they listened to testimony. Jurors have their own close-up view of visual exhibits, with six monitors installed in the jury box.

Ms Poppell’s questioning by the prosecution a day earlier allowed them to see in person the revolver and the spent round that killed Hutchins.

Mr Spiro emphasised in his opening statement that Baldwin on the Rust set did what actors always do.

“He must be able to take that weapon and use it in the way that the person he’s playing would,” Mr Spiro told jurors.

That includes pulling the trigger. Baldwin has said the gun fired accidentally, but Mr Spiro said that it still would not be manslaughter even if he had wilfully fired it.

“On a movie set, you’re allowed to pull that trigger,” Mr Spiro said.

Mr Spiro called the shooting an “unspeakable tragedy” and that an “amazing person” dies, but said the responsibility lies with the film’s armourer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, who has already been convicted of involuntary manslaughter, and of assistant director David Halls, who told Baldwin the gun was “cold”.

“It had been checked and double checked by those responsible for ensuring the gun was safe,” Mr Spiro said. “He did not tamper with it, he did not load it himself. He did not leave it unattended.”

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