Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Involuntary Manslaughter Charges to TV Redemption With "The Baldwins"
Episode Date: March 8, 2025Two people were shot on the set of Alec Baldwin's movie Rust. Director of photography Halyna Hutchins died, and director Joel Souza was wounded. Reports say first assistant director David Halls picked... up one of three prop guns set up by armorer Hannah Gutierrez and yelled, “cold gun.” "Cold gun" is industry slang meaning the gun does not contain live rounds. Halls gave the gun to Baldwin, who used it to rehearse a scene. According to the search warrant, Baldwin aimed the weapon at the camera when he fired, striking Hutchins and Souza. Reports suggest crew members used the weapon for target practice earlier that morning. A judge dismissed charges against Baldwin. The actor sued and launched a reality show. Now critics have panned "The Baldwins" and Halyna Hutchins' family condemns the show as well. Joining Nancy Grace today: Paul Szych – Former Police Commander; Author: “StopHimFromKillingThem” on Amazon Kindle; Twitter: @WorkplaceThreat; Screen Actors Guild-Eligible Actor Domenic Romano – NY Corporate Lawyer and Entertainment Attorney, Romano Law Dr. Shari Schwartz – Forensic Psychologist (Specializing in Capital Mitigation and Victim Advocacy); Author: “Criminal Behavior” and “Where Law and Psychology Intersect: Issues in Legal Psychology;” X: @TrialDoc” Karen L. Smith – Forensic Expert, Lecturer at the University of Florida, Host of ‘Shattered Souls’ Podcast; Twitter: @KarensForensic Dr. Michelle DuPre – Former Forensic Pathologist, Medical Examiner and Detective: Lexington County Sheriff’s Department, Author: “Homicide Investigation Field Guide” & “Investigating Child Abuse Field Guide;” Forensic Consultant Alexis Tereszcuk - CrimeOnline.com Investigative Reporter, Writer/Fact Checker, Lead Stories, X: @swimmie2009 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
How did Hollywood megastar Alec Baldwin's shooting death of a cinematographer, a young mom,
seemingly disappear off the radar without a blip.
He then went on to star in a reality show with his very large family, according to many, as some sort of a rehabilitation PR stunt.
But has Alec Baldwin's redemption reality show backfired?
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
Thank you for being with us.
According to TV pundits, a reality show, the ingredients being one famous movie star dad, a glamorous, much younger mother,
mixed with seven beautiful children, it should be a hit, right?
Maybe, but that pesky manslaughter charge may have ruined the whole thing.
Instead of a hit new series, according to TV critics, it's the worst
TV program in many years. I'm frankly much more concerned by Helena Hutchins' death seemingly
disappearing, falling through the cracks of our justice system. But according to critics,
the Baldwins, the series that's the title, where the couple are executive producers, is called a, quote, new low.
Another says it's, quote, life of seven children and two parents
when the ghost of Alina Hutchins is hovering over the entire production. What happened?
Tragedy on the film set of a new Alec Baldwin movie and what police are calling
a misfire of a prop gun in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The sheriff's office there has just confirmed it was Baldwin who fired the prop gun
that killed a 42-year-old female director of photography, Helena Hutchins.
The film's director, Joel Souza, was also hurt.
This incident happened on the set of the Western Rust.
Now detectives are investigating what type of projectile discharged from this gun.
You were just hearing our friend Christine Johnson with CBS.
What really happened?
According to reports, the assistant yelled out cold gun just before the shooting,
which means the gun was safe, that it was loaded with a blank.
So how do we have a woman dead, another film person injured?
With me, an all-star panel to make sense of it all, if we can.
With me, Dominic Romano, lawyer, joining us out of New York at Romanolaw.com,
his specialty, entertainment law.
And I can tell you, somebody's going to need a lawyer.
Dr. Sherry Schwartz, forensic psychologist, joining us.
Karen L. Smith, forensic expert, host of Shattered Souls podcast at barebonesforensics.com.
Paul Zeich, joining us, special guest, former police commander and author of Stop Him From Killing them on Amazon. And he has lots of experience using firearms with blanks
during live action movie scenes like Terminator, Salvation, Dr. Michelle Dupree, forensic pathologist,
former medical examiner, author of Homicide Investigation Field Guide, and a former police
detective. But first to Alexis Tereschuk, CrimeOnline.com
investigative reporter joining us from Hollywood. Alexis, what is getting folded into the story,
right or wrong, is Alec Baldwin's history, his reputation for, let me just say, hot-headedness, to put it euphemistically. If he thought it was
a blank, and it should have been a blank, then history aside, it was an accident. But how can
it really be an accident when somebody loaded this prop gun with real bullets? You know what,
just start at the beginning.
They were on a set in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
It's a Western-style movie.
So they were sitting in a church, an old church scene,
and Alex Baldwin was sitting in one of the pews,
and he was practicing what's called a cross-draw.
And so that would be where the person,
take your left hand and grabs the gun out of the holster on the the opposite hip pulls it across to fire he was practicing this move standing the cinematographer
which is the person that makes the movie beautiful this is the person that that the direct that
films the scene she was standing in front of him with the assistant director stand i'm sorry with
the director standing right behind her he was looking over her shoulder to see what it would look like when Alex pulled the gun out.
He pulls it out of the side, points it at her to show them, pulls the trigger,
and it fires a live round into her, hits her in the stomach,
and actually, I believe, goes through her and grazes the director standing right behind her.
Hutch is pronounced dead at an Albuquerque hospital
after being rushed to the emergency room.
You know what?
I always love playing 911 calls for a jury
because it takes you back to what's really happening.
Not a description, not someone recounting what happened,
but you're hearing what really happened.
Take a listen to the beginning of that 911 call. Two people accidentally with gunshots had on movie set Bonanza Creek Ranch.
Can you hear me?
I'll connect you with medical dispatch if you'll need us.
Who are you calling?
Clear the road.
Is someone firing EMS on the location of emergency?
No, Bonanza Creek Ranch has two people accidentally
shot on a movie set by a cop gun.
We need help immediately.
Bonanza Creek Ranch.
Come on.
Stay on the phone with me.
We're going to get some help, okay?
Okay.
What is your name?
My name is Mitchell.
Ms. Mitchell, what's the phone number you're calling from?
Five O.
Don't hang up, okay okay hold on just one second
sounds like somebody else is calling for two and a little bit better mesh everybody should be we need some help our director and our cameraman camera woman has been shot Now, you hear repeatedly the word accident, accidentally throughout that.
But is it an accident?
Very often when you have, for instance, a DUI crash, people go, well, it was an accident.
But was it? Because the driver chooses to go to a bar to order drinks, to drink, to become legally intoxicated,
to then get the car keys, walk to the car, get in the car, crank up, reverse, and drive out onto the roads.
That sounds pretty deliberate.
So is it an accident?
Is it gross negligence?
Well, take a listen to more of that 911 call.
So, was it loaded with a real bullet or what?
I cannot tell you that.
Okay.
We have two injuries.
Trump and movie gun shot.
Okay.
We're getting them out there already.
Just stay on the phone with me.
Okay.
Okay. they're already just down the phone with me okay
this is she that yelled at me at lunch because I was talking about revisions
can you hear me I'll go to my desk and yell at me
she put the chest in gun she's responsible for helping me
are you a teacher now Mimi?
no no no I'm a script supervisor
how many people were injured?
two that I know of.
I was sitting, we were rehearsing, and it went off, and I ran out.
We all ran out.
They were doubled over, the AD and the camera woman and the director.
We're clearing the road for you to come back.
We're back in the town.
Take a call, and we're back in the Western town.
Okay, I'm away.
Is there any serious bleeding?
I don't know.
I ran out of the building.
But when we leave...
I still have to go through these, okay?
Are they completely alert?
I'm hearing a lot of discussion in the background.
You hear the speaker talking to somebody else about someone yelling at her and Lutch about script
revision. And she says she's supposed to check the gun. He's responsible for what happened. No, no,
I'm a script supervisor. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
That's right.
There never seems to be an end to the Alec Baldwin manslaughter saga.
Now, apparently this couple, Alec Baldwin and his wife seemed to think that a reality show was the answer to his PR problems caused by the shooting death at his hand of a beautiful young mom, a cinematographer on the
set of movie Rust. But the fallout of that shooting may have doomed the reality show.
Aside from the reality show, I can't get my mind off the fact that Alec Baldwin insisted he did not pull the trigger.
But according to ballistics experts, that is a lie.
What happened on the set of Rust?
And why are we now reduced to simply analyzing a reality show? Where is the justice?
Paul Zyke, thank you for being with us. What went wrong? Obviously, there was a live bullet in what should have been a prop gun, but what happened? Nancy, the only explanation for this is a systemic breakdown in systems that are in place
to ensure that live ammunition is not present on the set.
Okay, now that was a lot of words, Paul Zyke.
I think you're saying somebody didn't do their job?
Well, absolutely.
Somebody did not do their job and catastrophically did not do that.
There's no reason whatsoever for live ammunition to be on the set of any set because these weapons
are capable of firing live rounds. They're not really prop guns. They're deadly weapons being
used as props. Okay. Hold on right there. I want to make that distinction. You're absolutely right. When, look, I'm a trial
lawyer. I'm a legal expert. You're the expert in this world. When I say prop gun, I mean they're
using it as a prop. But you're making a very fine, subtle, but important distinction. A prop gun is
a fake gun. I don't think it even can shoot. Is that right?
Exactly. You're talking about, say, a prop knife, correct? It has a flat edge on it. It's incapable of cutting you.
These are things that are not deemed to be dangerous. A prop gun is simply, as utilized on set, are weapons that are capable of firing live ammunition.
And therefore, accidentally, live ammunition and therefore accidentally live
ammunition could be mixed with blank rounds um you know given time this is just a disaster waiting
to happen they need to move to true guns that are incapable of chambering live ammunition
until that happens this has a very strong chance of repeating itself. Well, OK, tell me this, Paul Zeit.
Guys, with me, Paul Zeit, he is a former police commander.
He's an author, screen actors, Gil, and has experience using blanks during live action movie scenes where we all think they're shooting real guns.
If you suspend your disbelief in movies like his Terminator Salvation, those aren't real guns if you suspend your disbelief in movies like his, Terminator Salvation.
Those aren't real guns.
So why are they using a real gun to start with, Paul Zyke?
And I mean, to me, having been forced to handle so many guns and so many homicides, what moron
wouldn't make sure that there were blanks in the gun. It's hard to imagine that during the loading of the weapon that that was not viewed very strictly as a weapon is loaded.
And also there's a chain of custody issue here.
On the scene of Terminator Salvation, as we would go out and we would conduct a battle scene, if you will, in the middle of the night, we would be handed directly from the armor, fully automatic weapons and magazines fully loaded with
blanks. And we would head straight out to where the scene was to be shot. And then we would engage
in the scene, you know, five, 10 minutes later, hand the weapon straight back to the armor,
all the ammunition back to the armor, all the magazines back to the armor, all the magazines back to the
armor. And we would not be able to touch those weapons again until the next scene. So from a
chain of custody standpoint, it went directly from the armor directly to my hand, my, you know,
the co-actor's hands that were with me. And that was maintained very strictly.
Hold on, Paul. I've got to soak in everything you're saying.
Because Dominic Romano, a high-profile lawyer joining us out of New York's specialty entertainment law,
and that's why Dominic's joining us today.
Dominic, hold on.
When you heard Paul Zykes say chain of custody,
I immediately thought of a serial murderer that I prosecuted on one murder.
We could get him on one.
And there ended up, I would say
three weeks before trial, I was just looking at the evidence and I noticed that the bag that
contained the evidence wasn't signed. It had never been signed by the homicide cop that picked it up
from, it was DNA in there, it was blood, from where it had been taken and carried
to the crime lab. It wasn't written on the back. Did anybody tamper with it? No, he just didn't
put his initials. I'm like, oh, dear Lord in heaven, the chain is broken. This could be attacked
at trial. I had to go back out to the jail, stand there and look at this killer while he pulled his
blood again. Then I carried it with my
investigator, myself, back to the crime lab to have it retested. Praise the Lord in heaven. It was his
DNA. Long story short, that's chain of custody. Your case can be lost. You can lose a serial
killer because somebody didn't keep the chain to preserve the integrity of the trial. That's what I thought when Paul Zyke said chain of custody.
But did you also hear him say, Dominic Romano, he handed it back to the, it sounded like he was saying armor or armory, but I've been reading about this case.
It's an armorer, armorer, who is the person in charge of all the weapons.
I think Paul is absolutely right.
Look, no one should ever be killed by a gun on a film set, period.
Those are the words of Brandon Lee's sister.
Brandon Lee shot on a film set in the early 1990s.
This should not happen.
There are established protocols, chains of command. I mean, there appears to be some
serious gross negligence on that set to allow that to happen. That is the appearance. And I
don't know what evidence can come out to rebut that presumption. A live round in, well, as Paul
Zyke has corrected me, it's not a prop gun. They were using real guns.
Hey, let me ask you a question, Paul Zyke.
Explain the difference in what a blank looks like as opposed to a live round, a bullet.
When we're saying live rounds, we're talking about a bullet.
What's the difference?
Can't you just look at them and you can see the difference?
In most cases, absolutely, it's very clear you can see the difference. In most cases, absolutely. It's very clear you can see the difference.
In some types of calibers, say.223, if you will, that's what an AR-15 would shoot,
the blanks are kind of crimped at the end to almost look like there's a bullet on the end of them.
But any sort of trained professional whatsoever, when you're handling a blank, you know it's a blank.
When it's a bullet, you know it's a bullet.
The blank does not have a lead projectile or a steel projectile at the end of the round.
So at the end, it's either flat or it's slightly crimped to hold in the gunpowder,
which the firearm usually needs the gunpowder to correctly function the weapon and cycle the weapon.
And it's one of the reasons why blanks are used.
Okay, Paul Zyke, I really respect you, but you're going to have to dumb me down for me, okay?
Because I would have to put you through intensive training before you took the stand
because a lot of people do not know what you just said.
Just think about it and think if
there's a way you can say it in more simple terms. What's the difference between a blank and a live
bullet when you look at it? Speak English, man. In the meantime, wait a minute. You mentioned
Brandon Lee and you're absolutely right. We pulled sound of other cases almost identical to this.
This is not the first time it's happened,
believe it or not. Tyler, could you roll our cut 44? Let's follow up on what Paul Zyke said about
Brandon Lee. Here's where the bullet comes from that killed Brandon Lee. Some believe a piece of
a prop bullet without gunpowder in it may have been left accidentally in the gun. When the blank
was fired at Brandon, some feel it shot out the prop bullet,
mortally wounding him. The movie was an accident waiting to happen. The Crow crew member we spoke
with says that there were many opportunities for an accident to happen. Are the working conditions
on the set of The Crow particularly bad? Extremely long hours, 18-hour days back to back at times,
pushing 90 to 100 hours a week in six day weeks is way too much.
Do you think that that overwork, that exhaustion might have resulted in this accident?
Safety precautions, all of them were definitely not followed.
It could have been prevented with better management.
The publicist for the movie The Crow denies that the working conditions were unsafe.
Certainly everyone was very tired and exhausted from the shoot, but these are professionals, and they're used to working conditions like this.
Okay, guys, you were hearing our friends at Inside Edition, and I want to follow up on what we're just hearing with Alexis Tereschuk. is because on the Alec Baldwin set of Rust, there apparently were problems with working conditions.
A group of the crew had walked out,
I think the night before,
claiming that they had bad hotels.
They were an hour away from a hotel or motel.
And if they worked late into the night,
they'd have to drive through, I guess, the desert.
And a lot of them were actually sleeping in their cars overnight.
That's just some of the complaints I've heard.
But what are the other complaints, if any, on the Alec Baldwin movie set?
Well, there have been complaints that things were not safe, quote.
But one of the person that is being directly blamed for a lot of the unsafe is when you were listening to the 911 call and you said you heard the woman saying that he was yelling at me, things like that.
This is the assistant director that they're talking about.
And this is the assistant director, David Hall, who handed the gun to Baldwin and said, this is a cold gun.
So what the people on the set were saying is that Halls was not a responsible person.
He was very angry. He was making the job very difficult for everybody to do, and they didn't
trust him. Wait a minute. You're saying David Halls was an assistant director? Yes. Okay,
well, what about the armorer? Isn't she the one responsible for all the weapons and the
blanks or the bullets? Guys guys take another listen to our cut 43
this is about practically the same thing happening before listen it was here at the carol co studios
in wilmington north carolina that actor brandon lee was filming the crow ironically the film is
about a man who dies and comes back to life to avenge his death. Shortly after midnight last Tuesday,
Brandon Lee was preparing to film a routine action scene.
The script called for him to get shot at
as he walked through a door carrying a bag of groceries.
Michael Massey, the actor doing the shooting,
is reportedly devastated by Lee's death and remains in seclusion.
The gun he was using was supposed to be loaded with blanks.
When the cameras rolled, Brandon Lee was performing for the last time. and remains in seclusion. The gun he was using was supposed to be loaded with blanks.
When the cameras rolled, Brandon Lee was performing for the last time.
The first episodes of a reality show starring Alec Baldwin,
his wife, and their seven children are hitting the airwaves.
Now, according to a string of PR specialists,
no one could imagine any advisor would have recommended the Baldwin's Agree to a Reality series in the very best of times, let alone after the shooting death
of cinematographer Helena Hutchins.
Weigh in, Karen Smith.
Well, we deal a lot with forensics and physics when we do a reconstruction.
We use snippets of time, and sometimes that can be split seconds. And this includes trajectories
of projectiles. And this trajectory can generally be explained by the reporting. Alec Baldwin was
reported to be sitting at a church pew to align a camera angle when the gun was fired. Alina Hutchins
then collapsed on the floor, and Joel Souza was struck in the clavicle.
That's an upward trajectory,
which means both Hutchins and Souza
were standing up when the event occurred.
The projectile that perforated Helena's body
and subsequently struck Joel.
Now, in order for that to happen,
the kinetic energy,
which is energy as the result of motion,
would be very high.
We're dealing with mass or
the amount of matter in an object and energy dispersion. Guns carry a high volume of energy
in a small space. And that, from my experience, it tells me that it was something other than just
the paper or plastic wadding from a blank round. That needs to be confirmed by the ME and the
investigators. But there are reports of live ammunition, bullets, being on the set,
and that particular gun allegedly being used for target practice that morning.
There's a lot of questions that need to be answered by the investigators and the ME.
A gun for the set being used as target practice?
Paul Zyke, that shouldn't be.
You've got crew members out shooting bottles, I think that that's coming out, with
live bullets and use that same gun for a scene in a church full of people?
And Nancy, I just want to clarify the prior point.
So very simply, a blank is a shell casing with gunpowder in it with no bullet.
A bullet is the same exact thing with more gunpowder and a live bullet at the end of it that is made to travel through the barrel and exit the weapon.
But back to what you were saying, that's a cardinal rule that's been broken, whether you're whether you're involved in police training or you're involved in a movie set, keeping live ammunition away from weapons that fire live ammunition
and keeping weapons that fire blanks away from those instances.
And when you mix those two together, the odds of somebody having a spare live round in one
of their pockets or you name it is super high and that sounds very sloppy and it
it just just uh opens the door for terrible things to happen and that's where the the systemic
breakdown and that controlled environment i'm telling you paul's like you're right super sloppy
is one way to put it gross negligence or uh unintentional murder is another way to put i
think i hear dominic romano jumping in go ahead yeah basically it's a catastrophic miscalculation
i think two people here should be folk we should focus on um one is the armor right this is only
according to reports her second movie which you're 2019 production of Freedom's Path after two members suffered a minor injury.
Whoa, wait a minute.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, wait, wait.
You got me drinking from the fire hydrant, which is not a bad thing.
It's too much at once.
Hold on.
Why in the world would you have somebody that was fired off another similar job handling your weapon?
Okay, is that what you just said, Dominic?
Okay, almost.
Almost.
So the armorer is 24 years old.
The person handling the weapons is only her second film.
She was just in a podcast last month where she said, you know, she was a bit nervous about her film, but it went well.
Her father is apparently a famous armorer.
Okay, so we have that, an inexperienced armorer.
Number two, we have the assistant director, known as the AD, Dave Hulse.
Apparently, according to a report, he was fired from the 2019 production.
The movie was Freedom Path.
After a crew member suffered, guess what?
A minor injury when a gun unexpectedly discharged.
Dominic Romano,
the word similar transactions
are jumping to mind.
I mean, this
solidifies my thought
that this is not an accident because
an accident is when
you totally don't see it coming.
It's just like out of the blue.
But if this guy, if it's correct, the AD had a previous incident
where somebody was shot on a set, even if it was a minor injury,
then you should have seen, you either knew or should have known.
Would you agree with that, Dominic Romano?
There are going to be some serious questions to be asked,
and there have to be answers. And if we don't have good answers,
someone is either going to be involved in a very expensive lawsuit or depending on what they knew
and when they knew it and how careless they were, probably facing some time. The other issue you
alluded to earlier is cost cutting. It's rampant in the industry right now.
And the production company's decision not to book the crew hotel rooms near the actual set, but to have them travel an hour in each direction to get to and from their accommodation, to have long hours where people walked off the set earlier that day in protest.
So this is a combination of what turned out to be a lethal combination,
a catastrophic calculation on the part of the production company.
Well, you just said a mouthful all in a good way between the armorer being inexperienced,
the AD having a prior similar transaction, and budget cuts, problems
amongst the crew.
Take a listen to our cut six from our friends at NewsNation now.
Let's start with the people responsible for handling a gun.
There are no ubiquitous rules across all film sets, but generally there are some guidelines
that they follow adhering to a budget.
Budget usually plays a big role.
On many sets, there are no fewer than
three people responsible for monitoring a weapon. A prop master, who's in charge of all props,
is often supported by a safety officer and a stunt coordinator. And depending on the state,
you may also need to bring in an armorer, whose only job is handling weapons. An armorer is
required by New Mexico state law.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
According to Baldwin's manager, quote,
there actually hasn't been much criticism of the first episodes.
Also, he claims, it's been very well
received at TLC and everybody's very happy with it. Others strongly disagree. Reality series or
no reality series, PR be damned. I'm more concerned about the shooting death of Alina Hutchins. Dr. Dupree, I'm sure you, like myself, have had to handle
weapons in front of juries. And I learned this from watching a pro try cases. I would always
pick the gun up, holding it face down with a barrel pointing to the ground. So the jury
or anyone else would not be alarmed.
What you don't want to do is scare your jury.
I would walk in front of the jury, holding the weapon, nose down,
open the chamber, let them see me check it,
hold it up like I was examining it at my eye level
so they could see that it was empty, and then shut it and then give it to the witness without fail.
Even if it was a weapon that I knew was inoperable, that was S.O.P.
Why? Why would that not occur on a movie set?
But describe how you're supposed to handle weapons.
Exactly, Nancy.
You described it perfectly.
That is exactly what you should do.
And if you're giving a weapon to someone else, normally you have the chamber open so that they can also see.
And then you both check it and know that it's empty or that the blanks are in it.
Tell me what you can discern about what
Karen Smith, forensics expert, just told us
about the injuries.
What happened? Nancy,
even though these are, quote, prop guns
or blanks, they can still
obviously do devastating damage.
The wadding or whatever
they are filled with, even in a blank.
But this was not a blank. This was an actual
projectile. and as we know
you mean a bullet speak english please a bullet yes yes this is a bullet and the caliber of that
bullet of the gun is what is going to determine how much damage is done as she explained the higher
the caliber the more energy in that bullet and so the more damage done to the physical body.
And of course, the location where that bullet enters the body, in this case, was devastating.
You know, another issue to Dr. Sherry Schwartz, I've been on a lot of TV sets, obviously,
and movie sets for, you know, cameos or some legal issue.
And I got to tell you, Dr. Sherry Swartz, a movie set takes on a whole,
it's like you're in a different world. Like when you go to the movies and you sit down and it goes
dark, your mind takes you there. When you're on a movie set, I've never been on a single movie set
that went on time. You go till one or two o'clock in the morning.
It's pitch dark outside. You keep going until you get the shot or you finish the scene or
whatever it's called in movie world. I think that there is a suspended
fear. You think you're at a movie set, like when you go to Disneyland or when you're on vacation on a cruise ship, you suspend your normal thinking. It doesn't seem real. And you're not thinking, wow,
there's a gun. I could get shot because it's quote, just a movie. It's not real.
How do we, let me just say, suspend our disbelief, suspend rational rules of functioning when you're on a
movie set or in a movie. You know, like in movies where there's some nut with a gun and you hear a
sound, but you don't think it's real because you're in a movie. What happens in the human mind, Dr.
Sherry? Well, when you don't think that something is actually real, then you would not calculate accurately what the potential risks are.
Right. And so there is this gun on the set, but everybody thinks, oh, it's just make believe we're setting this up to film it.
Nobody's actually going to get hurt.
And so what happens mentally is that you underestimate what the potential risks
are. And what happened here is an egregious underestimation, right? So for the rest of us,
it's make-believe. Maybe even for the actor, they know that they're just playing a role and
everybody around them might know they're playing a role, but there are people on the set who are
responsible for that gun and for taking
that proper care and knowing what the potential risks are.
Back to you, Alexis Teresha, CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter.
You have heard Dominic Romano, Paul Zeit, well, everyone on the panel weighing in, but
apparently there were a lot of problems and a lot of disgruntled crew members. I understand that one of the motels they had set them up to stay overnight was at a place for the homeless.
And there were drug addicts there.
They were afraid to stay there.
What was going on on the set?
Well, it seems like what they were trying to do was make this film as cheaply as possible.
Understandable. But they were trying to do was make this film as cheaply as possible. Understandable.
But they were putting people's lives at risk.
It was 50.
Hotels were 50 miles away.
So after working 14 hour days, the crew was having to drive over an hour to get to their hotel.
Then they would have to be back within like six hours.
So they would get almost no sleep at all.
They were also saying that things were just not safe.
There had been an incident a few days earlier that one of the prop guns, again, prop gun, real gun, had been accidentally fired.
And so the crew had been complaining to the producers saying this is not a safe working environment.
And they walked off the set.
And so Hollywood is very much a union business, but the producers hired
non-union people to replace
them. These non-union people, though, are
not the people. It's not the armor
and it's not the assistant director.
And everybody's been talking, there is a line
of protocol.
You have so many steps in the line
of defense so that when this gun
got to Alex Baldwin, at least two other people were responsible for saying that it wasn't loaded.
I mean, didn't somebody even scream out cold gun?
I mean, they have to yell it out.
You know what you were just saying?
I know so many times for different shoots.
I don't know who he is that carries that comes over and they have
to do it a certain way. They have to say a certain thing and they say it really loudly. I don't know
why, but I'm sure there's a reason for it. Just like they would yell out cold gun and everybody
would hear it. But I guess they yelled it out without checking, Alexis. And there are reports that, yes, so there were three guns that were set up.
And they were put on a table outside the church set.
And this is because of COVID-19 protocols.
So not a lot of people are in the, if it's an enclosed set, they're not there.
Three guns.
So the assistant director picked it up, Dave Halls, as the other guest said, you know, has a history of a lot of accidents on set and handed it to Baldwin.
And he is the one that yelled out, cold gun.
There's no, nobody has said, so many people have spoken to the police on the set, so many of the other crew members.
And they said they didn't know whether it actually was empty or not.
And these guns were used at lunch.
This is a post-lunch break, so they broke for lunch at 1230.
They come back after lunch.
During that lunchtime, there were reports that the crew members were using this gun and other guns to shoot beer bottles out in the desert area and using it as target practice.
So there could have been a live.
And Mary said there was lots of live ammunition. Nobody was told they couldn't bring live ammunition on set. That's
another thing that. Why do you need a live round on set? That's the big problem here.
Is that Paul? Jump in. Yeah, I'd like to jump in there. It's it's it's simply a breakdown of
the security of the scene. The only people there that are armed should be
security personnel. And, you know, in my years, my decade of fighting to keep workplaces safe
and to stop stalking offenders from killing victims, I can tell you one thing, and that is
nobody thinks the unthinkable is going to happen. It's a matter of just human thinking. They think
that, well, that happened to somebody else. It didn't happen to happen. It's a matter of just human thinking. They think that, well,
that happened to somebody else. It didn't happen to me. And because this is somewhat of a rare
occurrence on set, people got laxed. They got lackadaisical about fundamental when it comes to
shooting a scene such as this. And just like at any workplace, this is a workplace out in the
middle of the desert, just like it would be in an office building.
Those protocols broke down and people at work attempting to do the right thing for the right reasons had a catastrophic, devastating thing happen.
Because we as human beings think, well, if it hasn't happened, it won't happen.
And that's just not the reality of life when it comes to dangerous events.
You know, Alec Baldwin is a great, great actor.
A lot of people don't like him because he rubs them the wrong way with his jokes, with his actions, with, you know, just a history of comments and behavior that irritates some people.
But I can tell you this, when I saw the photos of him literally doubled over in grief,
I don't think that was acting.
I think that was real.
As Alec Baldwin's reality series plods on, What about Helena?
And more important,
what about the little boy she left behind?
Nancy Grace, signing off.
Goodbye, friend.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.