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AN animated video shows how Alec Baldwin shot dead cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the film set of his movie Rust.

The director is being sued over the “reckless” death of Hutchins by her family.

Baldwin was shown firing the fatal shot in a newly released CGI re-enactment
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Baldwin was shown firing the fatal shot in a newly released CGI re-enactmentCredit: Panish Shea Boyle Ravipudi LLP
An animated video shows how Alec Baldwin shot dead cinematographer Halyna Hutchins
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An animated video shows how Alec Baldwin shot dead cinematographer Halyna HutchinsCredit: Panish Shea Boyle Ravipudi LLP
Halyna Hutchins' family sues Alec Baldwin over fatal Rust set accident
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Halyna Hutchins' family sues Alec Baldwin over fatal Rust set accidentCredit: Getty
The suit claims Alec Baldwin and the other defendants in the case 'failed to perform industry-standard safety checks'
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The suit claims Alec Baldwin and the other defendants in the case 'failed to perform industry-standard safety checks'Credit: Getty Images - Getty

Hutchins was fatally shot while director-writer Joel Souza was injured when Baldwin discharged a prop firearm in October last year.

Her family lawyers released an animated 3D re-enactment clip during a rehearsal in a church.

It showed a computer-generated avatar of Baldwin taking a gun and pulling the trigger.

An animated Hutchins collapsed to the ground and others rushed to help her.

The video highlighted texts and emails sent before the tragedy that revealed fears about the safety standards on set.

Lawyers branded Hutchins' death "senseless" as they revealed details of the lawsuit filed on behalf of the cinematographer's husband, Matthew, and their son Andros, 9.

“He lost his long-term wife who was the love of his life, and his son lost a mother,” said Brian Panish, who represents Hutchins’ estate, during a Tuesday press briefing.

“It never should have happened.”

The suit, filed in New Mexico on Tuesday, claims Baldwin and the other defendants in the case "failed to perform industry-standard safety checks" on the Santa Fe movie set.

It also alleges that they failed to "follow basic gun safety rules while using real guns to produce the movie Rust, with fatal consequences" and accuses the defendants of cutting corners.

“In New Mexico, we’re used to people coming in from out of town to play cowboy who don’t know how to use guns,” Randi McGinn, the estate’s attorney in Albuquerque, said.

“You don’t hand somebody a gun until you’ve given them safety training… No one should ever die with a real gun on a make-believe movie set.”

Camera assistant Lane Luper had raised red flags about accidental discharges and left the production with several others before Hutchins' death.

'DESERVED TO LIVE'

Lawyers also provided a list of 15 safety violations they claim were made on set.

"Halyna Hutchins deserved to live," the lawsuit states.

"The Defendants had the power to prevent her death if they had only held sacrosanct their duty to protect the safety of every individual on a set where firearms were present instead of cutting corners on safety procedures where human lives were at stake, rushing to stay on schedule and ignoring numerous complaints of safety violation."

Along with Baldwin, the family is also suing El Dorado Pictures, Rust Movie Productions, Short Porch Picture, and several others.

Hutchins left behind a nine-year-old son
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Hutchins left behind a nine-year-old sonCredit: AP
The fatal shooting took place last October on the Rust movie set in New Mexico
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The fatal shooting took place last October on the Rust movie set in New MexicoCredit: AP

"Industry standards required Mr. Baldwin to be trained and qualified in the safe handling and proper firing procedures before accepting the revolver," family attorney Kristina Martinez said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Martinez claimed the actor "refused weapons training on the set," saying: "The first rule for safety with firearms at a production set required Mr. Baldwin to treat all firearms as if they were loaded and refrain from pointing a firearm.

On February 15, Baldwin shared a video on Instagram of a sign made of LED lights that read “Everything is going to be alright.”

In the post’s caption, the actor tagged the Parrish Art Museum located in Water Mill, New York.

FATAL ACCIDENT

"The industry standard required Mr. Baldwin to remember that any person or object of which he points a firearm could be destroyed.

"Mr. Baldwin, aimed the revolver at his cast and crew within a dangerous distance. The cast and crew were only four feet away from Mr. Baldwin's weapon," Martinez added.

The shooting happened last year as Baldwin was reportedly practicing a cross-draw technique.

It involved him pointing a Colt .45 revolver at a camera on the set, according to police reports.

It was supposed to be loaded with dummy rounds but was accidentally fitted with live ammunition, authorities added.

A bullet from the gun fatally hit Hutchins and a stray bullet wounded Souza.

Baldwin has not yet commented on the new lawsuit.

After the shooting, he tweeted: "There are no words to convey my shock and sadness regarding the tragic accident that took the life of Halyna Hutchins, a wife, mother, and deeply admired colleague of ours."

He also claimed that he didn't pull the trigger of the gun and that Hutchins had told him to point the revolver off-camera and toward her armpit.

"I would never point a gun at anyone and pull a trigger at them," Baldwin said during an ABC News interview.

"Even now, I find it hard to believe that. It doesn't seem real to me."

Lawyers revealed on Tuesday that Balwin last met with Hutchins's family just after the shooting.

The Sun exclusively reported last October that Baldwin could be hit with civil charges over the film set shooting.

Leslie Y. Garfield Tenzer, a Pace Law School professor and host of Law to Fact podcast, told The Sun that rookie armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed and Assistant Director David Halls could be charged with involuntary manslaughter.

And Bill Davis, a police officer for 21 years turned prop master armorer who has worked on more than 300 movies and TV shows including SAW, told The Sun the same thing in a separate interview.

Their comments came as the Sante Fe County District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies revealed she is not ruling out criminal charges, saying: "Everything at this point, including criminal charges, is on the table", the New York Times reported.

Santa Fe investigators are probing how live rounds found their way into the weapon.

At least three other lawsuits have already been filed over the shooting.

Read More on The US Sun

This is the first suit directly tied to one of the two people shot.

The new suit is expected to reach trial within one to two years.

Alec Baldwin sued over 'reckless' shooting death on Rust film set by Halyna Hutchins' family

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