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A Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled on April 17–18, 2026 that a civil negligence suit filed by Serge Svetnoy, the gaffer on the 2021 Rust production, may proceed to a jury trial this fall.
Judge Maurice Leiter denied summary-judgment motions brought by Alec Baldwin, Rust Movie Productions LLC and Baldwin’s company, allowing claims of negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress and punitive damages to survive.
Svetnoy, who was standing near cinematographer Halyna Hutchins when a revolver discharged on Oct. 21, 2021, alleges cost-cutting and safety lapses on the New Mexico set and says he narrowly escaped being struck; he seeks compensation for psychological trauma.
The judge dismissed an assault count but found sufficient evidence to let a jury decide whether Baldwin and the producers had duties over set safety.
A trial date was set for Oct. 12, 2026 unless the parties reach a settlement.
Baldwin was earlier cleared in criminal proceedings after a 2024 dismissal; the film’s armorer, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2024 and served time.
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NBC News Top StoriesAlec Baldwin to face civil trial over alleged negligence in 'Rust' shooting, judge rules
New York Times HomePageLawsuit Against Alec Baldwin for ‘Rust’ Shooting Heads Toward Trial
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Key issues are the civil burden of proof and the practical meaning of a “producer” credit: the trial will hinge on evidence of Baldwin’s operational control. Insurers’ incentives make settlement a likely pathway, with financial liability the main risk.








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