![Assistant director David Halls said he saw armourer Hannah Gutierrez give Alec Baldwin the gun. (AP PHOTO) Assistant director David Halls said he saw armourer Hannah Gutierrez give Alec Baldwin the gun. (AP PHOTO)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/a7532b51-3646-4ac5-86ec-c3a21e352957.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Testimony in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer by Alec Baldwin has conflicted earlier accounts about a final safety check and exactly who handed the revolver to the actor during rehearsal for the western movie Rust.
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Assistant director David Halls, the safety co-ordinator on set, told jurors on Thursday that weapons supervisor Hannah Gutierrez, who is on trial for involuntary manslaughter and evidence tampering, twice handed the revolver to Baldwin.
It was first emptied of bullets, Halls said, and then loaded again with several dummy rounds and a live round.
Baldwin was pointing the weapon at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins when it went off on the movie set ranch on the outskirts of Santa Fe on October 20, 2021, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza.
Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer on Rust, faces a separate trial for involuntary manslaughter in July.
"I did not see Ms Gutierrez take the gun from Mr Baldwin," Mr Halls said during questioning by the prosecution.
"But she appeared back on my left-hand side and she said that she had put dummy rounds into the revolver."
Halls, who pleaded no contest in 2023 to negligent use of a firearm and completed six months of unsupervised parole, described a rudimentary safety check in which Gutierrez opened a latch on the revolver and he could see three or four dummy rounds inside.
"She took a few steps to Mr Baldwin and gave ... Baldwin the gun," he told the court.
Gutierrez has not testified but told investigators she left the loaded gun in the hands of Halls and walked out of a makeshift church on the set beforehand.
She has pleaded not guilty.
Baldwin initially told investigators Gutierrez handed him the gun but later said it was Halls.
The actor has said he pulled back the hammer, but not the trigger.
Halls acknowledged on the witnesses stand he "was negligent in checking the gun properly" because he did not examine all the rounds inside.
His testimony included an account of standing about one metre from Hutchins when the single gunshot rang out.
As she was on the ground, he asked if she was all right.
"She said, 'I can't feel my legs'," Mr Halls said.
Halls said he left the church to ensure sure someone called emergency services.
He said he struggled to understand how a live round could have been fired, returning to the church to retrieve the gun from a pew before taking it outside to have it unloaded by a crew member and inspect the ammunition.
"The idea that it was a live round of ammunition that went off ... it wasn't computing," he said.
Defence lawyers say problems on the set were beyond Gutierrez's control and have pointed to shortcomings in the collection of evidence and interviews.
They also say the main ammunition supplier was not properly investigated.
Prosecutors say Gutierrez is to blame for bringing live ammunition on set and she treated basic safety protocols for weapons as optional.
They say six live rounds bear identical characteristics and do not match ones seized from the movie's supplier in Albuquerque.
Australian Associated Press