Rust film armourer sentenced to 18 months in fatal shooting by Alec Baldwin
Gutierrez, stepdaughter of Hollywood gun trainer Thell Reed, was sentenced by New Mexico District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer.
Gutierrez’s lawyer Jason Bowles had requested she be given probation, but prosecutors argued for a full 18 months because of a lack of contrition.
Prosecutor Kari Morrissey pointed to phone calls by Gutierrez from prison in which she said the jurors were “idiots”, the judge had been “paid off”, and she continued to blame Baldwin and others for the shooting.
Rust armourer found guilty of involuntary manslaughter
Gutierrez had already spent a month in Santa Fe county jail following her conviction.
On March 6, a Santa Fe jury took less than two hours to find her guilty. One juror afterwards said Gutierrez had not done her job to ensure weapons safety on set.
Hutchins’ death initially prompted US film and television productions to stop using real firearms and blank ammunition. Two and a half years later, many are using them again because of the realistic effects they produce, according to armourers.
Hutchins was fatally shot when Baldwin pointed his gun at the cinematographer and cocked the weapon as she set up a scene.
During Gutierrez’s three-week trial, prosecutors accused her of unknowingly bringing live Colt .45 rounds onto the set of the low-budget film, something that has been strictly forbidden for nearly a century under Screen Actors Guild safety guidelines.
Bowles said Gutierrez was the scapegoat for a chaotic production where she was not given time to check weapons. He blamed Hutchins’ death on reckless use of firearms by Baldwin and his efforts to rush and control the filming. Baldwin was also a producer and writer on the film.
The 30 Rock actor denies pulling the trigger and said he had been directed to aim it at the camera. But the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and an independent firearms expert found the gun would not fire without the trigger depressed.
Film historians such as Alan Rode have looked back to the early part of the 20th century to find examples of Hollywood cast or crew killed by live rounds accidentally loaded into guns.
Previous on-set fatal shootings of actors Brandon Lee in 1993 and Jon-Erik Hexum in 1984 involved blank rounds.