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You're on!
I will say that a gun-ignorant group in NM jury selection is not on the table. Further, Santa Fe is a gun-knowledgeable place (with only 150,000 people - counting the very elderly and the very young!) The jurors who do get seated will be mostly middle aged and quite knowledge about NM, guns and its gun laws. My prediction is that they won't be persuaded by Baldwin's celebrity-ness at all.
NM law has many provisions for how involuntary manslaughter suits this crime - yes, beyond a reasonable doubt. They're actually very progressive in that way. They've had to be.
I think most NM juries will consider whether he AIMED the gun at her (because the first rule of gun safety is....well, you know!)
This is why negligence, and not just in NM, is "pointing a gun at someone" (whether you thought it was operable, loaded or whatnot) is still negligent. And that's where they will pin him.
IMO.
HH asked him to aim at the camera (link above) this means the person operating the camera gets a gun pointed at them. This is normal on sets although there are safer ways to do this.
So they can't pin that line of reasoning on him.
What a juror knows about guns they need to erase from their minds because it is prejudicial. They have to just stick to the evidence about Alec's gun. long Colt .45 revolver. Dummy rounds.....2 Cents
Why would the gun have been pointing at the cinematographer?
We don't know what happened on the set of Rust, but it is fairly common to have a gun pointed at the camera, and by extension the cinematographer, to get a certain angle."We've all seen the very famous shots in films where you get that dramatic effect of a gun being pointed at you, the audience, and of course, it's being pointed toward the camera," explained Steven Hall, a veteran second unit director and cinematographer who has worked on films like Fury and Thor: The Dark World.
"To minimize that, one would put a remote camera in that place, or at least, if someone does have to operate the camera, I'm normally protected by safety goggles, a safety visor and often a PERSPEX screen that withstands pretty much anything. Obviously, it wouldn't withstand a real shot from a gun, but it would certainly withstand a blank."
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