Investigation On October 21, the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office said it was investigating "what type of projectile was discharged" and how the event occurred. Baldwin was questioned and left without charges filed. The Sheriff's Office confirmed the cooperation. On October 22, the Santa Fe County Magistrate issued two search warrants. In an
affidavit, the Sheriff's Office said neither Halls nor Baldwin knew the gun was loaded. the department said they had recovered over 600 items as evidence, including 500 rounds of ammunition which were a mix of blanks, dummy rounds and suspected live rounds. They added that a projectile had been recovered from Souza's shoulder, which they categorized as a suspected live round. The film's production company, Rust Movie Productions, was conducting an internal review. On the same day, women's rights attorney
Gloria Allred and her law firm Allred, Maroko & Goldberg were confirmed to be investigating the incident and representing
Rust script supervisor Mamie Mitchell. On October 28, Halls hired Albuquerque attorney
Lisa Torraco as his defense lawyer; Gutierrez-Reed hired former
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Bowles as her lawyer. On November 3, Bowles gave a television interview in which he suggested that the incident was the result of "
sabotage". Without naming any individuals, Bowles cited the walkout of the camera crew earlier on October 21, calling the crew "disgruntled" and implying that one of them may have been motivated to "tamper with this scene" by placing a live round in the chamber of the Pietta revolver. On November 10, Santa Fe County District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies said "we do not have any proof" of sabotage and added, "The defense attorneys, we don't have the same information that they do, but until we have it in our hands, it doesn't play into the decision making process." That same day, Bowles continued to spread his theory and said his team "are convinced that this was sabotage and Hannah is being framed." In December 2021, Gutierrez-Reed's father Thell Reed said there was "a lot of motive" for the incident to be sabotage. On December 2, 2021,
ABC television host
George Stephanopoulos interviewed Baldwin. On December 6, Baldwin deleted his Twitter account. On December 16, it was reported that Santa Fe police had obtained a
search warrant for Baldwin's mobile phone, which was handed over on January 14, 2022. In August 2022, FBI forensic testing and investigation of the firearm determined the Pietta .45 Long
Colt Single Action Army revolver could not have been fired without a trigger pull from a quarter cocked, half-cocked, or fully cocked hammer position. It was also determined that the internal components of the revolver were intact and functional which ruled out mechanical failure as a reason for an accidental discharge. Baldwin stated during a December 2021 interview for
ABC News that "the trigger wasn't pulled" and "I didn't pull the trigger."
Prosecution On April 20, 2022, the state of New Mexico's Occupational Health and Safety Bureau fined Rust Movie Productions $136,793 (USD) for firearms safety failures after it was confirmed that David Halls, an assistant director and safety coordinator, handed a large-caliber revolver to Alec Baldwin without consulting with on-set weapons specialists prior to or after the gun was loaded. Regulators note that Halls had previously witnessed two other accidental discharges of rifles on set, but he took no investigative, corrective or disciplinary action. In February 2023, the producers agreed to pay a reduced penalty of $100,000 to resolve the
OSHA case with the New Mexico Occupational Health and Safety Bureau. On January 19, 2023, New Mexico First Judicial District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies said she would charge Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed with one count each of
involuntary manslaughter. Halls signed a plea agreement for the charge of negligent use of a deadly weapon. Carmack-Altwies hired
Andrea Reeb as a special prosecutor for the case. Carmack-Altwies said that she would be handling the case in conjunction with Reeb. On March 14, 2023, Reeb announced her resignation. On March 29, after a New Mexico judge denied Carmack-Altwies' request to bring on a new special prosecutor and serve as co-counsel, the Santa Fe district attorney also stepped aside and appointed a pair of veteran New Mexico attorneys Kari Morrissey and Jason Lewis as special prosecutors to take over the high-profile case. In April 2024, Lewis withdrew from the case and attorney Erlinda Johnson was appointed as a special prosecutor. She resigned just before the charges against Baldwin were dismissed. On January 31, 2023, Alec Baldwin and Hannah Gutierrez-Reed were officially charged with involuntary manslaughter for the fatal shooting. One of Baldwin's attorneys was
John Bash. However, after Baldwin's lawyers argued that he was
incorrectly being charged under a version of the law that was not passed until months after the shooting, the prosecutors downgraded the charges. Thereafter, Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed faced a maximum of 18 months in prison if found guilty. On February 23, Baldwin pleaded not guilty. On March 31, 2023, Halls pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of negligent use of a deadly weapon and was sentenced to six months of unsupervised probation, a $500 fine and 24 hours of community service. On April 20, 2023, lawyers for Baldwin announced that the criminal charges against him had been dropped by prosecutors. In a statement, Baldwin's attorneys said "We are pleased with the decision to dismiss the case against Alec Baldwin and we encourage a proper investigation into the facts and circumstances of this tragic accident." A lawyer for Gutierrez-Reed said they were aware of the charges on Baldwin being dropped, but the charges against Gutierrez-Reed remained. Investigations into the shooting continued; according to the special prosecutors in the case, charges against Baldwin "may be re-filed". On June 22, 2023, Gutierrez-Reed faced a second charge of
tampering with evidence, in which the special prosecutors allege that she transferred "narcotics to another person with the intent to prevent the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of herself." On August 4, 2023, Gutierrez-Reed waived her right to a preliminary hearing to determine whether or not the criminal charges would stand, thus allowing the trial to move forward and on August 9, she pleaded not guilty to both charges. On August 21, a New Mexico judge scheduled her trial to run February 21 through March 6, 2024. On October 17, 2023, six months after felony charges were dropped against Baldwin, prosecutors announced their intent to ask a
grand jury to determine whether he should again be criminally charged in the death of Halyna Hutchins. On January 19, 2024, exactly one year to the day involuntary manslaughter charges were first announced against Baldwin, he was indicted again on the said charge in Hutchins's death. On January 31, he pleaded not guilty and under the conditions of release, Baldwin was barred from possessing any firearms, consuming alcohol, leaving the country or coming into contact with anyone who may testify in the case. On March 6, 2024, after a jury deliberated for about two hours, Gutierrez-Reed was found guilty on the charge of involuntary manslaughter but acquitted of tampering with evidence. Almost immediately after the verdict was read, she was remanded into custody until her sentencing hearing set for April 15, 2024. On April 15, 2024, Gutierrez-Reed was sentenced to 18 months in prison. She was released on May 23, 2025 after completing her sentence. Under the conditions of parole, Gutierrez-Reed is barred from contacting any member of Hutchins's family and owning firearms, and required to undergo a mental health assessment, meet regularly with a parole officer and agree to electronic monitoring. On May 24, 2024, Sante Fe-based Judge
Mary Marlowe Sommer denied a motion which was filed by Baldwin to dismiss his trial, thus clearing the way to move forward. The trial began on July 9, 2024. On the first day, 12 jurors and 4 alternative jurors were selected. On July 10, opening statements got underway, with the prosecution arguing that the gun assigned to Baldwin when the shooting took place "worked perfectly fine" and that Baldwin didn't do a gun safety check with the "inexperienced" armorer and pulled the trigger "in reckless disregard for Miss Hutchins's safety." On the evening of July 11, 2024, Baldwin's lawyers filed a motion to dismiss the case over allegations prosecutors hid evidence regarding the source of the bullets loaded into the gun. A set of bullets had been submitted to the authorities, with the witness claiming the bullets were related to the
Rust case, but the bullets were filed under a different case number and the defense were not informed of them. Judge Sommer found that the authorities had "unilaterally withheld the supplemental report [regarding the bullets]. Santa Fe County Sheriff’s officer made the and apparently also with the prosecutor[…] that the evidence was of no evidentiary value and failed to connect the evidence to the case." Sommer further opined that the authorities' "willful withholding of this information was intentional and deliberate. If this conduct does not rise to the level of bad faith, it certainly comes so near to bad faith as to show signs of scorching prejudice". On September 4, 2024, the prosecutor filed an appeal to overturn the decision which dismissed the case with prejudice. On September 5, the judge denied the prosecutor's bid to revive the manslaughter charge due to the motion exceeding ten pages; a revised motion was promptly submitted by the afternoon of September 6 which met the page limit. On September 26, a motion for Gutierrez-Reed's case to be retried or dismissed on the same basis as the dismissal of Baldwin's manslaughter charge was heard; the motion was denied on September 30, with Judge Sommer ruling that Gutierrez-Reed's defense had failed to establish that any suppressed evidence would have produced a different verdict. A motion for Gutierrez-Reed's immediate release from prison was also denied with Sommer saying that Gutierrez-Reed's defense had not established that she was unlikely to "flee or pose a danger to the safety of any other person or the community if released". On December 23, the prosecutor withdrew her second appeal of the judge's order dismissing the case after the state attorney general's office said it "did not intend to exhaustively pursue the appeal on behalf of the prosecution", officially bringing Baldwin's manslaughter case to an end. == Civil lawsuits ==