Accidents The young master of the western film that led to the photographer’s death does not know how hard stakes ended in Baldwin’s Turma weapon

According to lawyers for Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, who was caught in the eye of the storm, Turma was not the blame for the deputy. The legal team describes the budget as ahead of security in the descriptions.

Hollywood star Alec Baldwinin the deputy master of the infamous western film says he has no idea how hard the stakes had ended up in the Turma weapon.

Last week, a photographer for the Rust Western film Halyna Hutchins died of his injuries in the shootings after Baldwin fired a props weapon that was loaded with real cartridges instead of snag heads.

A projectile thrown from a gun first pierced Hutchins’ body, after which the bullet had continued its journey, hitting the film’s director Joel Souzaa to the shoulder.

At the filming site in New Mexico, the primary responsibility for weapons had been held by a 24-year-old production master Hannah Gutierrez-Reed.

The gunman’s statement on Friday through his attorneys was the first time Gutierrez-Reed has commented on the case in public.

“Ultimately, the security of the filming location would not have been compromised if hard stakes had not been put in place,” the deputy’s spokesman said in a statement.

“Hannah has no idea what” the hard stakes had come from.

Production as deputy master, Gutierrez-Reed is responsible for the safety of the weapons used in the descriptions. Similarly, the weapons master’s account is that the whereabouts of the weapons are known at all times and the weapons are kept behind locks when not in use.

Production staff have been reported to have used props guns just hours before the fatal shooting. Staff are said to have shot tin cans due to the exercise.

However, Gutierrez-Reed denied the allegations on Friday. According to the press release, the commander-in-chief had never witnessed anyone firing hard stakes at them, and would not have allowed this. The weapons are said to have been under the control of the master and props master.

“They were behind bars every night and at lunchtime, and it is not possible that any of them were missing or that staff members would have fired at them,” the press release continued.

According to law enforcement documents seen by news agency AFP on Friday, there was a prop truck at the scene, where more than a dozen guns were stored.

Rust staff had lodged complaints about security laxity at the scene. In addition, in the days before Hutchins’ death, a gun had been accidentally shot at the scene at least twice.

According to Gutierrez-Reed’s law team, neither shot of damage would have been the culprit of the deputy master. Lawyers also painted a picture of the production that security was secondary to budgetary issues.

According to lawyers, production restrictions made it difficult for the gunsmith to concentrate on his work, and not enough time was provided to maintain the weapons and prepare for their use.

“The entire production site became unsafe for a number of reasons, including a lack of safety meetings. This was not Hannah’s fault, ”the lawyers emphasized.

Hutchins a fatal shooting case has plunged a young gunmaster into the eye of a storm. He has been described as inexperienced in the aftermath of the accident in the U.S. media.

Gutierrez-Reed is said to have received, among other things, in the filming of another western film, the actor Nicolas Cagen on the verge of rage by firing a loaded weapon near it.

In addition, he is said to have endangered the safety of an 11-year-old child actor by giving him a prop weapon that had not been properly checked before.

Rust’s assistant director has also received questionable publicity Dave Halls, who had handed the gun to Baldwin and said it was safe. After the accident, it has emerged that Halls had previously been fired for a gun safety violation.

In 2019, the assistant director had received a shoe in the midst of filming for Freedom’s Path when a production worker was unexpectedly injured after the gun fired.

A week ago following the tragedy on Thursday, several demands have been made to ban the use of real weapons at filming locations. Many people think that modern special effects are good enough to make plastic weapons look real.

Oscar winner, actor Matthew McConaughey considers, however, to AFP that there is no need for a ban. According to him, genuine weapons should be completely safe as long as the security protocol is followed.

He therefore estimated that the accident at the Rust scene took place because the safety protocol had not been complied with.

“I don’t know if they would have been in a hurry,” he says.

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