‘Guns Are Always Loaded’: Hollywood Weapons Expert Says Alec Baldwin Broke Cardinal Rule Of Gun Safety

Alec Baldwin was violating one of the cardinal rules of handling a firearm when he reportedly accidentally shot and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins last week, a Hollywood gun expert said.

“Loaded or unloaded, a weapon never gets pointed at another human being,” firearms consultant Bryan Carpenter of Dark Thirty Film Services told The New York Post. “You never let the muzzle of a weapon cover something you don’t intend to destroy.”

“All guns are always loaded. Even if they are not, treat them as if they are,” he added.

Baldwin shot and killed Hutchins and wounded director Joel Souza on Thursday while working on the set of “Rust,” a western film which Baldwin is co-producing and staring in, at Bonanza Creek Ranch near Santa Fe, New Mexico. Baldwin was rehearsing a scene in which he points a gun at a camera when the firearm unexpectedly discharged, according to a police affidavit.

Peter Lake, a former filmmaker and former member of the U.S. National Shooting Team, said that Baldwin bears the blame for the tragedy.

“The buck stops with Alec Baldwin on every level,” Lake said. “It looks very bad for him. At least the captain of the Titanic had the good sense to go down with the ship.”

Baldwin could be in legal trouble over the shooting, but how much is up for debate and may rely on facts about the incident yet to be uncovered. As attorney Jonathan Turley, a professor at George Washington University Law School, argued in a Fox News op-ed:

If true, Baldwin had little reason as an actor to suspect anything was wrong with the prop. The problem is that Baldwin was not simply an actor. He was also one of the producers on a site that had reportedly experienced prior discharges and complaints about site safety.

New Mexico has a provision that allows “involuntary manslaughter” charges for “the commission of a lawful act which might produce death in an unlawful manner or without due caution and circumspection.” If there was a pattern of neglect, including prior discharges from these prop weapons, the producers could be charged with involuntary manslaughter. Such a charge is a fourth-degree felony in New Mexico, with a penalty of 18 months jail time and up to $5,000 in fines.

The difficulty for criminal defense attorneys in dealing with such charges is that they do not require “specific intent.” Given prior deaths from prop guns (as with Brandon Lee in the


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