The jury at Rust armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s manslaughter trial was shown a photo of the ammo cart used on the set where Alec Baldwin killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.
Both Reed and Baldwin are charged with involuntary manslaughter for Hutchins’ death.
She is accused of flouting gun safety procedures by handing Baldwin the weapon loaded with a live round.
Marissa Poppell, a crime scene technician with the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s office described the shambolic manner in which ammunition was stored on the set.
The jury was shown a photograph taken by Poppell of the prop cart which appeared highly disorganized, strewn with dummy rounds that were mixed with a live round.
The jury at Rust armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s (pictured center) manslaughter trial was shown a photo of the ammo cart used on the set where Alec Baldwin killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins
Among the rest of the photos shown to the jury was a gun belt assigned to Baldwin.
Poppell said there were ‘multiple rounds of multiple calibers all over the top portion of this cart’.
On the bottom were additional boxes of rounds, a single loose round lying in a corner as well as ‘plastic guns, gun belts and miscellaneous paperwork’.
In total, Poppell said that she found 255 dummy rounds on the set including in the prop cart.
Around 50 of those were just left loose and were in the bottom of boxes or on the floor of the prop cart.
Poppell said that a rifle that they found on set – not the gun Baldwin used – appeared to have jammed because the wrong kind of ammunition was put inside it.
It showed five bullets in the belt, with the second from left being a live round and the others dummies.
Another photo showed a bag holding ammunition with a can of Red Bull wedged into the side by the bullets.
The jury was then shown a photograph taken by Marissa Poppell, a crime scene technician with the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s office, of the prop cart which appeared highly disorganized and strewn with dummy bullets alongside a live round
Alec Baldwin said he had accidentally killed Hutchins and denies pulling the trigger. The jury was shown raw footage from the filmmaking process of Baldwin practicing drawing a gun while sitting on a church pew
The disorganized cart showed dummy rounds mixed with one live round, that ended up accidentally killing Hutchings
Baldwin, the lead actor and a co-producer on the Western movie Rust, was pointing a gun at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins (pictured) during a rehearsal outside Santa Fe in October 2021 when the gun went off, killing her
Earlier Thursday, new videos played at trial showed Gutierrez-Reed handing over the gun used by Baldwin to accidentally kill cinematographer Hutchins, telling the officers then told crew how ‘scared’ she was.
Prosecutors painted a picture of a ‘disorganized’ and ‘chaotic’ Reed who mixed live rounds with dummy blanks on set and did cocaine the night before the shooting.
Her attorneys, in response, told the jury that she has become the scapegoat of Baldwin’s carelessness, and that he should never have pointed the gun in the victim’s direction.
Baldwin was rehearsing a scene for Rust – his western movie – when he accidentally shot Hutchins.
He maintains he thought the gun was loaded with blanks and that he’d been assured it was safe, but says he did not even pull the trigger.
One of the prosecution’s evidence photos is seen above. Authorities found six rounds of ammunition on the movie set in locations that included a box, a gun belt and a bandolier worn by Baldwin
Gutierrez-Reed had a live round mixed with with dummy ones on set, prosecutors told the jury in her manslaughter trial on Thursday.
Court images of Alec Baldwin gun belt bullets with one live round found in between the dummies
Five other live rounds were later found on the set by investigators.
Gutierrez-Reed sat in court wearing a gray blazer and white top looking impassive as District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer read out the charges to the jury. Opening statements were delayed on Thursday due to a juror’s tardiness.
‘We believe that it was the negligent acts and failures of the defendant that resulted in both the acts that contributed to Miss Hutchins’ death and the live rounds being brought onto the set,’ prosecutor Jason Lewis said on in the state’s opening remarks.
Gutierrez-Reed’s attorneys have previously claimed that live rounds arrived on set from an Albuquerque-based supplier of dummy rounds.