As far as I can tell it was still going to be remote during the actual filming. Because it was rehearsal with the supposed "cold" gun the cinematographer was there.Would a remote camera setup be considered as being part of set safety?
As far as I can tell it was still going to be remote during the actual filming. Because it was rehearsal with the supposed "cold" gun the cinematographer was there.Would a remote camera setup be considered as being part of set safety?
So...
They had insurance on the movie.So...
If they are bankrupt, who will pay the victims?
If the
Yes, and I'm sure police know the difference between what a witness believes to be true, and what is a deliberate lie, and how to detect which is the case, for everyone they interview.Well, armorer also claimed there were no live ammunition on the set. Yet police believe they recovered live ammunition (they have to be checked by forensics first to be officially declared live ammunition, but I am sure police know one when they see it). So either she was unware of the presence of live bullets or she wasn't telling the truth about live bullets being on the set when police asked her.
Yes, but not too high.They had insurance on the movie.
Union people who left were the camera crew. Not the ones responsible for set safety.
Halls says he looked at the gun before giving it to Baldwin. But he only saw 3 dummy rounds, and didn't check the rest. Gun with dummy rounds is a cold gun, because dummy rounds can't fire bullets and don't make noise. Blanks are different from dummy rounds. Blanks will make noise when fired and could be dangerous in close distance.So, I'm not sure I have this straight. Reed checked the gun, then Halls looked (but not well, only saw three dummy rounds) then the gun went into a safe? After lunch the guns were taken out of the safe and????? What happened next? And why did he call it a cold gun if he saw three dummy rounds? I read that a gun is called live when it has blanks because the blanks can be dangerous too? Can someone clarify for me?
But, it was a single action gun. He had toIndustry standards often determine whether someone is negligent. They’re rigorously set up for a reason.
Baldwin is simply not culpable here. He is not the safety expert. It may seem like common sense to gun owners. But again, prop guns aren’t treated the same as guns in the real world.
It was not supposed to be loaded with live rounds. Live rounds weren’t supposed to be on set. It wasn’t even supposed to be loaded with blanks. The weapons master and prop master were responsible for ensuring that that was the case and Baldwin had every reason to be able to rely on their expertise before handling the prop, without checking it himself. Because he was not the expert in gun safety.
Not everyone even knows how to check the chamber. Or to tell the difference between a live round or a blank, which was not the issue here, but it proves the point.
Baldwin would be culpable when it comes to negligence if he grossly deviated from what he was supposed to do. Like I mentioned before, doing something like making his own decision to load the gun himself, for example.
Or, if he played a role in the hiring of the unprofessional prop and weapons masters.
I expect he will be named in any lawsuit. But as producer. But if he is named as negligent for his handling of the gun, he will not be found liable, ultimately. Because legally, he’s not liable.
Blanks do make noise.Halls says he looked at the gun before giving it to Baldwin. But he only saw 3 dummy rounds, and didn't check the rest. Gun with dummy rounds is a cold gun, because dummy rounds can't fire bullets and don't make noise.
Blanks are not the same as dummy rounds.Blanks do make noise.
There are no industry standards such as you claim.But, it was a single action gun. He had toit to make it fire. And, despite industry standards, he did not verify himself that it was empty. And furthermore, despite industry standards, he pointed it at someone, without a plexiglass shield in place, and pulled the trigger.
I respectfully disagree. Industry standards were not followed by others, but especially Alec Baldwin. IMO he needs to be charged with a crime.
Thinking that HGR's talk about her future brilliant career is a fantasy of her own making.Armorer's previous movie didn't go as smoothly as she said on the podcast.
""There's a universal way to handle weapons on set and immediately red flags went up when I worked with Hannah," Brumbaugh told CNN. "This is why I asked for her dismissal.""
'Rust' assistant director tells police he did not properly inspect gun (usatoday.com)