Judge Pauses Alec Baldwin Trial To Consider Request To Dismiss Case

Alec Baldwin Appears In Court For Involuntary Manslaughter Trial

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The judge overseeing Alec Badwin's involuntary manslaughter case paused the proceedings and sent the jury home for the weekend while she considered a motion to dismiss the case.

Baldwin's legal team filed the motion to dismiss, accusing prosecutors of hiding evidence. The filing was the result of testimony from Marissa Poppell, a crime scene technician, who told the court that Troy Teske, a retired police officer, had delivered ammunition to the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office in March, suggesting it could have been associated with an on-set shooting that left cinematographer Halyna Hutchins dead.

Poppell then explained that the ammunition was cataloged but never turned over to the defense or tested to see if it matched the lethal round that struck Hutchins.

Prosecutors argued that the evidence was irrelevant to the case, calling the motion to dismiss a "wild goose chase."

Once the jury was dismissed, Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer ordered Poppell and Rust firearms supplier Seth Kenney to testify about the ammunition used on the set. She also ordered Alexandria Hancock, the lead sheriff's investigator, and Jason Bowle, the defense attorney for the film's armor Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, to testify. Gutierrez-Reed was previously convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to 18 months in prison,


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