The prosecutor of the involuntary manslaughter case he faces Alec Baldwin by death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins during the filming of “Rust”assured that the actor compromised security by rushing the filming and lack of control over his emotions.

“Baldwin’s incessant rush with crew on set routinely compromised safety because ‘Rust’ is not a romantic comedy, it’s an action-packed Western, with dangerous stunts and real weapons used as props,” he said in a statement. a legal document from the special prosecutor in the case, Kari Morrisey. Morrisey thus responded to the attempts on March 14 by Baldwin’s legal team to have the claims dismissed. involuntary manslaughter accusations.

The actor He pleaded not guilty in a court document filed last February before a court in the First Judicial District of Santa Fe (New Mexico, USA), where the film was filmed in October 2021, when Hutchins died.

Baldwin, star and producer of the film, was carrying the prop revolver from which a real bullet came out that fatally hit Hutchins, will go on trial on July 9 accused of involuntary manslaughter. In the document, the prosecutor alleges that the attitude of Baldwin, whom she describes as “a man who does not control his emotions at all”, contributed to the security failures of the filming, as the actor yelled and cursed himself and other set workers, sometimes for no apparent reason. “Witnesses have stated that it was precisely this conduct that contributed to compromising security on set,” Morrisey said.

The prosecutor also argued that The actor, 66, has constantly changed his version in interviews about the events, creating a “false narrative” that shifted responsibility to others. Morrisey explained that the actor assured that he had never fired the weapon, and that this statement was not made in his initial statement with the Police. He also described that in media interviews Baldwin claimed that he had targeted Hutchins, only after she ordered him to. Morrisey also indicated that the actor’s legal team has carried out a series of personal attacks against the prosecutors in the case, which also include Jason J. Lewis.

The process, in which if the interpreter is found guilty he can face a sentence of up to 18 months in prison, will begin on July 9 with the selection of the jury, the testimonies will begin the next day and is expected to last for eight days .