'I didn't pull the trigger,' Alec Baldwin says of fatal film set shooting

'I didn't pull the trigger,' Alec Baldwin says of fatal film set shooting

Alec Baldwin said the biggest question in the shooting that killed a cinematographer on a New Mexico movie set is how the bullet ended up in the gun.

"There's only one question to be resolved, and that's where did the live round come from?" Baldwin said in an ABC interview with George Stephanopoulos that aired Thursday night. It was the first time the actor has spoken in depth on screen about the Oct. 21 shooting on the set of the Western Rust.

Baldwin said he did not pull the trigger of the gun he was holding that went off and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and wounded director Joel Souza.

"I didn't pull the trigger," Baldwin told Stephanopoulos. "I would never point a gun at anyone and pull the trigger at them. Never."

Baldwin said he and Hutchins "had something profound in common. We both assumed the gun was empty. "

U.S. actor-producer Alec Baldwin, left, is seen during an interview with Good Morning America co-anchor George Stephanopoulos. The hour-long interview about the fatal shooting on the set of Baldwin's film Rust aired Thursday. (APJeffrey Neira/ABC News via AP)

He later broke down in tears when describing the cinematographer, saying she was "somebody who was loved by everybody and admired by everybody who worked with her."

Baldwin said he decided to do the interview because he knew the criminal investigation and civil lawsuits surrounding the case would take months, and there were many public misconceptions to counter.

"I really feel like I can't wait for that process to to end," Baldwin said.

"I would go to any lengths to undo what happened," he said.

But Baldwin said "I want to make sure that I don't come across like I'm the victim because we have two victims here."

Alec Baldwin gets emotional talking about the 9-year-old son of the late Halyna Hutchins: "I think to myself, 'This little boy doesn't have a mother anymore.'" https://t.co/NQfXdJ88ta #BaldwinABC pic.twitter.com/8Xwi3EG7hS@ABC

The prime-time special aired on ABC Thursday night and was to stream on Hulu afterward.

The assistant director who handed Baldwin the gun backs up the actor's assertion that he did not pull the trigger.

Lisa Torraco, a lawyer for assistant director David Halls, told ABC News earlier Thursday that her client has always said Baldwin never pulled the trigger.

WATCH | Baldwin was told prop weapon was a 'cold gun' before shooting: 

Alec Baldwin was told prop weapon was a 'cold gun' before shooting

1 month ago
The gun used in a fatal shooting on the set of the movie Rust in New Mexico earlier this week had been declared safe to use by a crew member just before it was discharged, court records show. 4:00

"He told me since day one he thought it was a misfire," Torraco said.

"Until Alec said that, it was just really hard to believe, but Dave has told me since the very first day I met him, that Alec did not pull that trigger." 

Authorities have said Baldwin was told the gun was safe to handle. They continue to investigate how a live round ended up in the weapon.

A lawsuit filed by the film's script supervisor, Mamie Mitchell — one of at least two that name the actor and others as defendants — alleges that the script and director did not call for Baldwin to pull the trigger, but he did anyway.

Rust script supervisor Mamie Mitchell, left, appears with her lawyer Gloria Allred during a news conference in Los Angeles on Nov. 17. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)

Investigators have described "some complacency" in how weapons were handled on the Rust set. They have said it is too soon to determine whether charges will be filed, amid independent civil lawsuits concerning liability in the fatal shooting.

Baldwin said he met with the film's armourer Hanna Gutierrez Reed for a gun training session before the shoot, and she appeared capable and responsible.

"I assumed because she was there and she was hired that she was up to the job," he said.

Gutierrez Reed has been the subject of much of the scrutiny in the case. Her attorney has said she did not put the round in the gun, and believes she was the victim of sabotage.

ABC said a two-hour special 20/20 next week will examine the shooting investigation in more depth.