The recording of a 911 call has revealed the chaos and panic on a film set after a cinematographer was fatally shot by actor Alec Baldwin.
Script supervisor Naomi Mitchell tells the operator “we need help immediately” after Halyna Hutchins was struck in the chest on the set of the Western movie Rust in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on Thursday.
The film’s director Joel Souza, who was stood behind her, was shot in the shoulder after the prop gun discharged and has since been released from hospital.
In the 911 call made in the minutes after the shooting, Ms Mitchell is calm but clearly in a state of distress as background noises suggest people raced to get help for the two people who had been injured.
At one stage Ms Mitchell cannot be heard down the line, before the call handler urges her not to hang up and says it appears someone else at the scene is also calling for an ambulance.
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The script supervisor returns and says: “Good. Everybody should be. We need some help.”
The operator then asks if the gun was loaded with a real bullet, to which she replies: “I don’t, I cannot tell you that… we have two injuries from a movie gunshot.”
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When asked if there is “any serious bleeding”, Ms Mitchell says: “I don’t know. I ran out of the building.”
She then tells the operator she is not sure if Hutchins and Souza are “completely alert”.
Ms Mitchell is clearly desperate for an ambulance to be sent to the scene and is too preoccupied to answer the handler’s routine questions.
An unidentified male voice then comes to the phone and tells the operator the two people who were shot are “alert” but he is not sure what parts of their bodies were injured.
He later says he believes Hutchins and Souza each have one wound.
The call handler then confirms an ambulance is on its way and tells the man she will explain how he can help stop the bleeding.
The male caller tells her a medic is on set and he believes they are already doing that.
Referring to one of the shooting victims, he then adds “we got one laying down”.
The film’s assistant director Dave Halls had earlier handed Baldwin a prop gun and indicated it was safe to use, court documents show.
A search warrant filed in a Santa Fe court suggest neither Baldwin nor Halls knew the weapon was loaded with live rounds.
The gun was one of three firearms that the movie’s armourer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed had set on a cart outside a wooden structure where a scene was being filmed, according to court records.
Two crew members have told the Los Angeles Times a weapon had been unintentionally fired twice in the days before Hutchins was fatally shot.
They told the paper Baldwin’s stunt double had been told the prop firearm wasn’t loaded, including with blanks, before he fired the two rounds last Saturday.
The Los Angeles Times is also reporting that half a dozen camera crew workers had walked off set in protest against working conditions hours before the fatal shooting.
The employees felt safety protocols were not being strictly adhered to on the set in Santa Fe, New Mexico, sources told the paper.
They added that at least one camera operator had complained to a production manager about gun safety.
Rust Movie Productions has said it was “not made aware of any official complaints concerning weapon or prop safety on set” and will conduct an internal review of procedures.
It comes as Ms Gutierrez-Reed, the head armourer in charge of guns on the film, reportedly said in a podcast interview last month that she didn’t feel ready for the position when she took it up on a previous movie.
Her role on Rust is thought to be only the second time she has been head armourer.
She is also said to have admitted she found loading blanks into a gun “the scariest” thing and had sought help from her father, the renowned gunsmith Thell Reed, to overcome her fear.
The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office obtained a warrant on Friday so investigators could document the scene at the ranch outside where the shooting took place.
They sought Baldwin’s blood-stained costume for the film as evidence, as well as the weapon that was fired, other prop guns and ammunition, and any footage that might exist.
Within hours of taking office, president-elect Donald Trump plans to begin rolling out policies including large-scale deportations, according to his transition team.
Sky News partner network NBC News has spoken with more than half a dozen people familiar with the executive orders that his team plans to enact.
One campaign official said changes are expected at a pace that is “like nothing you’ve seen in history”, to signal a dramatic break from President Joe Biden’s administration.
Mr Trump is preparing on day one to overturn specific policies put in place by Mr Biden. Among the measures, reported by sources close to the transition team, are:
• The speedy and large-scale deportations of illegal immigrants
• Ending travel reimbursement for military members seeking abortion care
• Restricting transgender service members’ access to gender-affirming care
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But much of the first day is likely to focus on stopping illegal immigration – the centrepiece of Trump’s candidacy. He is expected to sign up to five executive orders aimed at dealing with that issue alone after he is sworn in on 20 January.
“There will without question be a lot of movement quickly, likely day one, on the immigration front,” a top Trump ally said.
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“There will be a push to make a huge early show and assert himself to show his campaign promises were not hollow.”
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Donald Trump ally Matt Gaetz has withdrawn his name from consideration to be the next US attorney general.
But Mr Trump’s campaign pledges also could be difficult to implement.
Deporting people on the scale he wants will be a logistical challenge that could take years. Questions also remain about promised tax cuts.
Meanwhile, his pledge to end the war between Russia and Ukraine in just 24 hours would be near impossible.
Even so, advisers based at Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort or at nearby offices in West Palm Beach, Florida, are reportedly strategising about ending the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Following his decisive victory on 5 November, the president-elect has moved swiftly to build a cabinet and senior White House team.
As of Thursday, he had selected more than 30 people for senior positions in his administration, compared with just three at a similar point in his 2016 transition.
Stephen Moore, a senior economic adviser in Mr Trump’s campaign, told NBC News: “The thing to realise is Trump is no dummy.
“He knows he’s got two to three years at most to get anything done. And then he becomes a lame duck and we start talking about [the presidential election in] 2028.”
Donald Trump ally Matt Gaetz has withdrawn his name from consideration to be the next US attorney general.
Mr Gaetz, a controversial pick to be the country’s top legal official, said his selection was “unfairly becoming a distraction” to the transition of Mr Trump’s administration into the White House.
The Florida Republican had faced significant scrutiny over a federal investigation into sex trafficking allegations involving a 17-year-old girl.
He said in a post on the X social media platform: “There is no time to waste on a needlessly protracted Washington scuffle, thus I’ll be withdrawing my name from consideration to serve as attorney general. Trump’s DOJ (Department of Justice) must be in place and ready on Day 1.
“I remain fully committed to seeing that Donald Trump is the most successful president in history. I will forever be honoured that President Trump nominated me to lead the Department of Justice and I’m certain he will Save America.”
Mr Trump said in a post on his own social media site, Truth Social, that Mr Gaetz had a “wonderful future”.
“I greatly appreciate the recent efforts of Matt Gaetz in seeking approval to be Attorney General,” he wrote.
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“He was doing very well but, at the same time, did not want to be a distraction for the administration, for which he has much respect.”
Mr Gaetz previously faced a nearly three-year Justice Department investigation into sex trafficking allegations involving a 17-year-old girl, which ended in February 2023 without him facing any criminal charges.
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He has always denied the allegations.
He has also been under scrutiny by the House Ethics Committee over wider allegations including sexual misconduct, illicit drug use and accepting improper gifts.
The inquiry was dropped on Wednesday 13 November when Mr Gaetz left Congress – the only forum where the committee has jurisdiction.
The Senate ethics committee is deadlocked on whether their report can be released.
Mr Gaetz’s withdrawal is a blow to Mr Trump’s push to install steadfast loyalists in his incoming administration and the first sign that he could face resistance from members of his own party.
A 43-year-old man was shot dead by police after calling 911 to report intruders had entered his home in Las Vegas.
Brandon Durham was at home with his 15-year-old daughter when he called the emergency line to report armed intruders were trying to break into his property on 12 November.
Bodycam footage shows Mr Durham struggling with a person over a knife in the moments before he was shot and killed at the scene.
“The loss of life in any type of incident like this is always tragic, and it’s something we take very seriously,” Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Assistant Sheriff Dori Koren said on Thursday.
The force is investigating the incident.
Mr Durham called 911 to report multiple people were outside shooting at his residence in Las Vegas’ Sunset Park neighbourhood, where he had been staying with his 15-year-old daughter, Sky News’ US partner network NBC reports.
It was one of multiple emergency calls reporting a shooting in the area.
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Mr Durham then said someone had managed to get into his home through the front and back doors of the property and he was locking himself in the bathroom, according to a police statement from 14 November, two days after the incident.
Officers reported to the scene at approximately 12:40am and could hear screaming from inside the residence.
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One of the officers, Alexander Bookman, kicked open the front door and once inside, saw Mr Durham and another individual, later identified as 31-year-old Alejandra Boudreaux, struggling over a knife in a doorway.
Mr Bookman ordered them to drop the knife and about two seconds later, the officer fired the gun and Mr Durham appeared to be struck, the bodycam footage shows.
Both Mr Durham and Mr Boudreaux fell to the ground and the officer fired another five shots. Roughly three seconds are believed to have gone by between the first and last shot, NBC reports.
Attempts were made to save the 43-year-old but he died at the scene.
Ms Boudreaux was taken into custody and is facing charges of home invasion with a deadly weapon; assault with a deadly weapon domestic violence; willful or wanton disregard of safety of persons resulting in death; and child abuse, neglect or endangerment.