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Friend says Halyna Hutchins died in his arms

 

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LOS ANGELES (NewsNation Now) — Mincing no words and speaking from the heart, a “Rust” movie staffer accused movie producers of putting savings above safety in an emotional Facebook post.

The film’s chief electrician Serge Svetnoy blamed producers for cinematographer Halyna Hutchins’ death. Hutchins was shot and killed last week on the New Mexico movie set after an assistant director unwittingly handed movie star Alec Baldwin a loaded weapon and told him it was safe to use.

The gun was loaded with live rounds, and when Baldwin pulled the trigger Thursday on the set of a Western, he killed Hutchins. Director Joel Souza, who was standing behind her, was wounded, the records said.

Svetnoy said he had worked with Hutchins on multiple films and faulted “negligence and unprofessionalism” among those handling weapons on the set. He said producers hired an inexperienced armorer.

“I want to tell my opinion on why this has happened. I think I have the right to do it. It’s the fault of negligence and unprofessionalism,” Svetnoy said in part. “The negligence from the person who was supposed to check the weapon on the site did not do this; the person who had to announce that the loaded gun was on the site did not do this; the person who should have checked this weapon before bringing it to the set did not do it. And the DEATH OF THE HUMAN IS THE RESULT!”

Svetnoy said he was standing next to Hutchins when the shooting happened and that she died in his arms.

  • Alec Baldwin

The gun was one of three that the film’s armorer, Hannah Gutierrez, had set on a cart outside the wooden structure where a scene was being acted, according to the records. Assistant director Dave Halls grabbed the gun from the cart and brought it inside to Baldwin, unaware that it was loaded with live rounds, a detective wrote in the search warrant application.

Guns used in making movies are sometimes real weapons that can fire either bullets or blanks, which are gunpowder charges that produce a flash and a bang but no deadly projectile. Even blanks can eject hot gases and paper or plastic wadding from the barrel that can be lethal at close range.

Production on the movie has stopped and the incident remains under investigation.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

West

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