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March 1, 2024, 02:17 PM | #51 | |
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Here's some question for those of you who like researching such things, How long have the current film industry "guideline" covering firearms been in place? How many movies using firearms under those guidelines have been made?? (how many westerns??) How many firearm accidents, how many people have been shot, how many killed on movie sets where those guidelines were adhered to?? It is true no chain is stronger than its weakest link, but when management chooses to not bother with that heavy, expensive chain and uses string instead, good results are not likely.
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March 1, 2024, 05:13 PM | #52 | |
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March 1, 2024, 05:15 PM | #53 | |
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The SAG firearms safety protocols, had even most of them been followed on the set of Rust, would have prevented Hutchins' death and Souza's injury. The problem wasn't the rules, the problem was the blatant disregard for those rules. The fact that most of the crew walked off the set because of safety issues should have been a wake-up call but, instead, Baldwin and company hired non-union replacements and doubled down on ignoring the safety protocols.
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March 1, 2024, 06:41 PM | #54 |
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They were making a movie, what could possibly go wrong?? go wrong?? go wrong??
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March 1, 2024, 07:19 PM | #55 |
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What I want to know ...
How many people were shot on the set of the TV show ... "Gunsmoke" Seems like it ran for 20 years and Matt shot some fellow every episode ! There must be a high body count on this one ! I think Baldwin erred twice ... he didn't check his weapon to see if it was loaded and he pointed it at something he didn't intend to shoot ... Just common gun safety you practice when hunting ... my daddy taught me that and he had no formal gun training . Just a dad teaching his son about hunting . Gary Last edited by gwpercle; March 1, 2024 at 07:24 PM. |
March 1, 2024, 07:51 PM | #56 | |
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OR ... It's also possible that he DID intend to drop the hammer, and proceeded to do exactly that -- not realizing that he would be dropping the hammer on a live round.
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March 1, 2024, 08:52 PM | #57 |
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Interesting ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5zKuFqaIXk This is the testimony of Bryan Carpenter, an experienced Hollywood armorer who was NOT associated with the Rust production. Listening to the prosecutor's line of questioning, it almost seems like she's more interested in setting up a case against Baldwin than she is in eliciting testimony aimed at convicting Gutierrez.
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March 1, 2024, 09:04 PM | #58 | |
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March 1, 2024, 10:45 PM | #59 | |
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March 2, 2024, 01:51 AM | #60 | ||
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Considering all the movie rules, regulations, procedures, best practices and everything else you can think of, how long has the most current system been in use, how many films (and I guess tv shows?) made following those rules, and how many firearms accidents, injuries and fatal shootings, have occurred ?? Quote:
Baldwin is the big fish here, and he's on the hook two different ways. First, he is the person who fired the fatal shot, and second, as head of the production company, he was the "captain of the ship" and therefore responsible for everything that happened. All of the mistakes, errors and bad decisions that played some part contributing to the fatal shooting were done can and should be laid at his feet, and he should be held accountable for what he did and failed to do. Not saying he's the ONLY person who should be held accountable for what happened, only that he's the one with the greatest share of responsibility, by far.
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March 2, 2024, 02:02 AM | #61 | |
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! Last edited by stagpanther; March 2, 2024 at 04:28 AM. |
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March 2, 2024, 04:27 AM | #62 | |
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I would expect that any one of them, if followed properly would prevent injuries and fatal shootings.
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March 2, 2024, 04:35 AM | #63 | |
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The PRIMARY responsibility is always going to be on the person in physical control of the firearm when it fired. The producers are responsible for the conditions that allowed the shooting to happen. If the person holding the gun had not pointed it at someone, no one would have been shot. Both parties are responsible, but not to the same degree. The person holding the gun is the cause, the actions, or failure to act on the part of management is a significant contributing factor.
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March 2, 2024, 05:08 AM | #64 |
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OK--just so happens I was involved in the filming of a piece for a biographic documentary--other than being "assumed" that I knew something about firearms nobody asked me anything about qualifications or operations. At one point during the filming I was asked to point my .41 mag SA blackhawk directly at the camera for a "hero shot." It was my gun, and I had already done everything to be absolutely certain it was unloaded and could not discharge. I still refused and the production crew was not happy about that, they repeated the request and I repeatedly refused. Pressure is there to do the cool shots--do employees risk their employment by questioning management--who may have little to no meaningfully provable experience in firearms safety?
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March 2, 2024, 08:46 AM | #65 | |
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That said this prosecutor just a year or so ago maybe two years now was a defense attorney, and one hell of a one at that . I forget the case, but she recently had a client in a self-defense shooting that she defended . She seems pretty good at whatever she does and doesn’t come across to be somebody that is partisan . So now that I think about , it makes me think maybe she’s helping out the civil trials while prosecuting the armor ???
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March 2, 2024, 09:47 AM | #66 | |
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https://www.sagaftra.org/files/safet...rt_1_9_3_0.pdf A couple of days ago I found a safety document from a different group than the SAG. It was typeset differently and had a different title page, but the safety protocols were the same.
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March 2, 2024, 10:09 AM | #67 | |
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In a video clip played during the direct examination of Bryan Carpenter, there was another scene shown being filmed where Baldwin burst out of a wooden shed, firing the revolver. He was shown lying on the ground, having fired all five or six rounds. He (Baldwin, not the director) immediately called for the action to continue, and he demanded that the gun be reloaded RIGHT NOW WHAT'S TAKING SO LONG CHOP CHOP. If he had been "just an actor" he would not have been making such demands -- which, byt the way skirted all the applicable protocols, because Gutierrez was jamming new rounds into the gun as fast as she could. David Halls the AD in charge of safety, should be been standing next to her to verify that each round was a crimped blank -- but he wasn't anywhere to be seen. Baldwin remained in his position on the ground, several feet away, so he was also not in a position to verify that the rounds were crimped blanks -- or what power level the blanks were. During the direct examination of Souza, the director who was wounded, he testified that although he had been a screenwriter for 20 years and a director for 15 years, he had never read the safety guidelines. During the direct examination of Bryan Carpenter (an experienced film armorer), he testified that it appeared the blanks being used in the scene where Baldwin demanded an instant reload were full-power blanks, where they didn't need to be (another violation), and that the second camera and crew were too close to Baldwin when he was firing. He implied that Gutierrez should have stopped that -- but so should the director (who testified that he wasn't familiar with the safety protocols). The entire production was a disaster waiting to happen. And it happened. It was an embodiment of what the aviation sector refers to as the "Swiss cheese model." You have multiple layers of safety rules in place so that if something gets through one hole, there's another layer that should prevent an incident. But if you allow all the holes to line up -- disaster.
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March 2, 2024, 11:15 AM | #68 | |
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March 2, 2024, 01:08 PM | #69 | ||
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A question for the legal eagles....
Can evidence, testimony, the court record, etc from one trial be admissible and used in another trial?? I understand its admission might be challenged as prejudicial to the new defendant's case, but that would depend on the new judge's ruling, to allow it, or not, right?? What I'm talking about in this case is the testimony being given now, describing what went on, on the sets, who did what, supplied what, all the background stuff that doesn't mention Baldwin's actions specifically. Quote:
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March 2, 2024, 01:32 PM | #70 |
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I am not an attorney and I have never pretended to be one, but there's a fairly fundamental principle under U.S. law that an accused has a right to confront his (/her/its/their/xyz) accuser. I think, based on that principle, that if (for example) Baldwin were on trial and the prosecution wanted to use Bryan Carpenter's opinions from the Gutierrez trial against Baldwin, the prosecutor would have to put Carpenter on the stand again so that Baldwin's attorneys could cross-examine him.
I believe an exception to that would be if Mr. Carpenter were to die, so he could not be called upon to testify in person, his sworn testimony from this trial would then be admissible.
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March 2, 2024, 01:43 PM | #71 |
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Another interview with a professional film armorer who was not involved in this production:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFl6c_58LRE
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March 2, 2024, 02:17 PM | #72 | |
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"Everyone speaks gun."--Robert O'Neill I am NOT an expert--I do not have any formal experience or certification in firearms use or testing; use any information I post at your own risk! |
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March 2, 2024, 03:56 PM | #73 | ||
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https://www.csatf.org/01_safety_bltn_firearms/ https://www.csatf.org/02_safety_bltn_live_ammunition/ csat actually has two different safety protocols relating to firearms/ammunition. https://www.actorsequity.org/resourc...e-of-firearms/ https://www.sagaftra.org/files/safet...rt_1_9_3_0.pdf https://www.bluecloud.com/app/upload...-Combined-.pdf https://www.productionmanagersforum....6-May-2019.pdf (British) Quote:
1. Did the person who was holding the gun at the time it discharged/was discharged and killed one person and injured another commit a crime? 2. Did the person running the organization commit crimes that led to a person holding a gun being discharged and killing/injuring persons on set. COINCIDENTALLY, the person in both questions is the same person, but the two issues are still separate and need to be discussed separately because the two crimes, and therefore the laws that apply are different. Trying to constantly switch back and forth just muddies the water.
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March 2, 2024, 04:35 PM | #74 | |
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It's fairly obvious, IMHO, that the revision was a response to the Halyna Hutchins incident. There are, in addition to new content, major changes in organization and editorial content of the 2003 material.
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March 2, 2024, 09:33 PM | #75 |
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If there's anyone here who might be interested in firearms, here's a video of the direct examination of the prosecution's forensic firearms expert, explaining to the jury how a single action revolver works, and showing what was damaged by the FBI in their testing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-jfL3Js9LA
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