'Rust' Armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed Sues Ammunition Supplier, Alleges She Trusted That 'No Live Rounds Were Ever To Be On Set'

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Rust armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed is reportedly suing a prop supplier in the aftermath of the accidental shooting on set in October, which claimed the life of the director of photography, Halyna Hutchins.

The 24-year-old reportedly sued Seth Kenney and his PDQ Arm & Prop company. She filed the lawsuit on Wednesday, January 12, in New Mexico, according to Fox News. The outlet reported that she cited New Mexicos' unfair-trade-practices law in the suit, she also sued Kenny for breach of contract, creation of a dangerous condition and deceptive product labels, and more.

According to the New York Post, a prop assistant brought in a new box of .45-caliber Long Colt rounds from Kenney’s shop on the day of the shooting, the suit alleged. Gutierrez-Reed claimed that she thought the box contained blanks.

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ALEC BALDWIN OPENS UP ABOUT ACCIDENTAL 'RUST' SHOOTING THAT KILLED CINEMATOGRAPHER HALYNA HUTCHINS: 'WE BOTH ASSUMED THE GUN WAS EMPTY'

Hutchins was fatally wounded after Alec Baldwin reportedly discharged a firearm. The film's director, Joel Souza, was also injured. The Still Alice actor is believed to have been told that the gun was cold.

The suit alleged that the defendants disturbed boxes of ammunition that contained a mix of dummy rounds and live ammunition, per Fox. "Hannah and the entire Rust movie crew relied on the Defendants’ misrepresentation that they provided only dummy ammunition. In so doing, Defendants created a dangerous condition on the movie set, unbeknownst to Hannah Gutierrez Reed, which caused a foreseeable risk of injury to numerous people," the suit read.

According to the suit, to the best of her knowledge, she believed the gun in question has been loaded with six dummy rounds, the Post reported. "Indeed, Defendants as suppliers of prop ammunition to the Rust set, sold, distributed, and advertised its props as dummy ammunition and not live rounds. Hannah relied upon and trusted that Defendants would only supply dummy prop ammunition, or blanks, and no live rounds were ever to be on set," the suit claimed.

The scene Baldwin was rehearsing was not a scheduled rehearsal, the suit claimed, per Fox. Assistant director Dave Halls was reportedly "sitting in" with the gun, but she alleged that the gun was not supposed to be used at all at that time.

According to the suit, due to COVID-19 restrictions, the armorer was not allowed to be in the church where the incident took place, instead, video monitors were placed outside so the crew could watch. However, on the day of the shooting, the monitors were not said to have been working, Fox reported.

Gutierrez-Reed reportedly said if she had been informed that a gun was being used, she could have reinspected the firearm and instructed Baldwin on safe gun practice while cross-drawing a gun. "Hannah would never have let Baldwin point the weapon at Halyna, as part of standard safe gun practices," the suit read.

Guitierrez-Reed is reportedly seeking a jury of six people and damages. The suit alleged that Kenney "took it upon himself to essentially investigate this matter for the Sheriff’s Office and insert himself into this matter and attempt to implicate Hannah."

During an appearance on Good Morning America in December, Kenney said that it's not a possbility that live rounds "came from PDQ or from myself personally," per Deadline.

HOLLYWOOD MOURNS THE LOSS OF 'RUST' CINEMATOGRAPHER HALYNA HUTCHINS AFTER ALEC BALDWIN FATALLY SHOT HER ON SET WITH PROP GUN

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In October, he reportedly told authorities that the live round may have been "reloaded ammunition" with a Starline Brass logo on it. "(Kenney) described how (Starline) only sells components of ammunition, and not live ammunition, therefore it had to be a reloaded round," a search warrant read.

Last month, the 63-year-old actor spoke to ABC News' George Stephanopoulos about the shooting. He said he did not pull the trigger. "I let go of the hammer of the gun and the gun goes off. That was the moment the gun went off," he explained.

Halls had supported the claim. His attorneyLisa Torraco previously said on Good Morning America that at the time, "Baldwin had his finger outside the trigger guard, parallel to the barrel."

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