STATE OF NEW MEXICO
COUNTY OF SANTA FE
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
STA’
E OF NEW MEXICO.
Plaintiff,
vs.
ALEXANDER RAE BALDWIN I
Defendant,
FILED 1st JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
‘Santa Fe County
2/10/2023 10:36 AM
KATHLEEN VIGIL CLERK OF THE COURT
Amy T Ruiz
No. D-0101-CR-202300-039
Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer
DEFENDANT’S NOTICE OF UNLAWFUL ENHANCEMENT AND
MOTION NO
BAILEY, LEBLANC & LANE, Pt
Heather M. LeBlanc
823 Gold Ave. SW
Albuquerque, NM 87102
Tel: 505-331-7222
heather@bIl law
BIND OVER ENHANCEMENT
ic QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART &
SULLIVAN, LLP
Luke Nikas (admitted pro hac vice)
Alex Spiro (admitted pro hac vice)
51 Madison Avenue, 22nd Floor
New York, NY 10010
Tel: 212-849-7000
Fax: 212-849-7100
[email protected][email protected]
John F. Bash (admitted pro hac vice)
300 W. 6th St., Suite 2010
Austin, TX 78701
Tel: 713-221-7000
Fax: 737-667-6110
[email protected]
Counsel for DefendantDefendant Alexander Baldwin files this notice to inform the Court that the government has
unlawfully charged an enhancement under the firearm-enhancement statute, NMSA 1978, § 31-
18-16. Mr. Baldwin also respectfully requests that that the Court decline to bind over that
enhancement.
INTRODUCTION
‘The prosecutors in this case have committed an unconstitutional and elementary legal error
by charging Mr. Baldwin under a statute that did not exist on the date of the accident. The
Information states that the second alternative count of involuntary manslaughter “shall be
enhanced pursuant to the firearm enhancement statute, §31-18-16, NMSA 1978.” But at the time
of the accident, October 21, 2021, the firearm-enhancement statute applied only when “a firearm
was brandished in the commission of a noncapital felony,” and it defined “brandished” to mean
“displaying or making a firearm known to another person while the firearm is present on the person
of the offending party with intent to intimidate or injure a person.” NMSA 1978, § 31-18-16(A),
(D) (eff. July 1, 2020 to May 17, 2022) (emphases added). The government's statement of
probable cause contains no allegation that Mr. Baldwin acted “with intent to intimidate or injure a
person,” and its description of the alleged conduct makes clear that the tragic death of
cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was an accident.
It thus appears that the government intended to charge the current version of the firearm-
enhancement statute, which was not enacted until May 18, 2022, seven months afier the accident.
That version no longer requires that a defendant “brandished” a firearm, instead imposing a five-
year additional sentence when “a firearm was discharged in the commission of a noncapitalfelony.” NMSA 1978,
31-18-16(C) (eff. May 18, 2022), But under the Ex Post Facto clauses
of the United
States and New Mexico Constitutions, as well basic principles of statutory
interpretation, that version of the statute could not apply to conduct that occurred before it was
enacted.
Accordingly, that enhancement should not be bound over. Application of the current
version of the statute would be unconstitutionally retroactive, and the government has no
legitimate basis to charge Mr. Baldwin under the version of the statute that existed at the time of
the accident,
BACKGROUND
This prosecution arises out of a tragic accident that took place on October 21, 2021, on a
movie set near Santa Fe. While the cast and crew were rehearsing a scene for the Western film
Rust, a firearm held by Mr. Baldwin discharged a live round that hit Ms. Hutchins and director
Joel Souza. Ms. Hutchins died of her wound.
After a fifteen-month investigation, the District Attorney and the appointed special
prosecutor announced on January 19, 2023 that they would file two involuntary-manslaughter
charges against Mr, Baldwin and seek to impose a firearm sentencing enhancement. The District
Attorney stated in a press release that “[t]he firearm enhancement makes the crime punishable by
a mandatory five years in jail.” Shortly after announcing the charges, the District Attorney gave
"News Release from DA Mary Carmack-Altwies on Charges Against Alec Baldwin,
Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN (Jan. aaa 2023),
https://www.santafenewmexican. com/news-release-from-da-mary-carmack-altwies-on-charges-an interview to CNN in which she stated: “Just because it is an accident doesn’t mean that it’s not
criminal.”? She added: “Our involuntary manslaughter statute covers unintentional killings,
unintentional homicides. Unintentional means they didn’t mean to doit, they didn’t have the intent
to kill, but it happened anyway.”
On January 31, 2023, the government filed an information charging Mr. Baldwin with two
alternative counts of involuntary manslaughter under NMSA 1978, § 30-2-3(B). The last sentence
of the second alternative count states: “This offense shall be enhanced pursuant to the firearm
enhancement statute, §31-18-16, NMSA 1978.” Information filed Jan, 31, 2023 (“Information”)
On the same day, the government filed a statement of probable cause. Consistent with the
District Attorney's public statements and television interviews, the statement of probable cause
alleges that Mr. Baldwin “acted with reckless disregard and/or more than mere negligence in this
incident” and “with willful disregard of the safety of others,” but it does not allege that Mr.
Baldwin acted with the intent to intimidate or injure another person. Statement of Probable Cause
filed Jan, 31, 2023 (“Probable Cause Statement”), To the contrary, it makes clear that Mr. Baldwin
had been practicing a scene with the guidance of Ms. Hutchins and Mr. Souza when the gun
against-alec-baldwin-hannah-gutierrez-reed/article_f843a8fe-98 14-1 led-9526-
032214a2e9eb, html
2 Ray Sanchez, Why Santa Fe District Atorney Decided To Charge Alec Baldwin over
‘Rust’ shooting, CNN (Jan. 19, 2023), https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/19/us/santa-fe-alec-
baldwin-rust-charged/index. html
5 Id.discharged, and it alleges that the death of Ms, Hutchins was the result of a failure to follow safety
protocols, not an intentional effort to intimidate or injure another person.
ARGUME!
'T
Mr, Baldwin respectfully requests that the Court decline to bind over the firearm
enhancement, Even taking the govemment’s allegations as true solely for the sake of this motion,*
those allegations do not meet the statute’s requirements. On the date of this accident, the firearm-
enhancement statute applied only if Mr. Baldwin “brandished” a firearm during the commission
of an offense, NMSA 1978, § 31-18-16(A) (2020), and the statute’s definition of “brandished”
required acting with the “intent to intimidate or injure a person.” /d. §31-18-16(D) (2020). But
the government has not even alleged that Mr. Baldwin acted with such an intent
Instead, the prosecutors committed a basic legal error by changing Mr. Baldwin under a
version of the firearm-enhancement statute that did not exist on the date of the accident, In May
2022, the New Mexico Legislature amended the statute to add a five-year enhancement for
“discharg[ing]” a firearm, L. 2022, Ch. 56, § 30.
+ Mr. Baldwin intends to contest the numerous false allegations contained in the Probable
Cause Statement at the appropriate time and therefore reserves all rights.‘The following chart reproduces the relevant language of the two statutes:
Firearm-Enhancement Statute on
Date of Accident:
A. When a separate finding of fact by the
court or jury shows that a firearm was
brandished in the commission of a
ital felony, the basic sentence of
imprisonment prescribed for the offense
in Section 31-18-15 NMSA 1978 shall
be increased by three years
Firearm-Enhancement Statute as
Amended on May 18, 2022:
C. When a separate finding of fact by the
court or jury shows that a firearm was
discharged in the commission of a
noncapital felony, the basic sentence of
prisonment prescribed for the offense
in Section 31-18-15 NMSA 1978 shall
be increased by five years
D. As used in this section, “brandished”
means displaying or making a firearm
known to another person while the
firearm is present on the person of the
offending party with intent to intimidate
or injure a person.
It appears from the District Attorney’s statements (including statements to the public and
on television that Mr. Baldwin faced a five-year mandatory sentence) that the prosecutors intended
to charge Mr. Baldwin under the May 2022 version of the statute, But itis clear that the firearm
enhancement cannot apply here as a matter of law: application of the current version would be
unconstitutionally retroactive, and the government lacks probable cause or any legitimate basis to
charge the version in effect at the time of the accident.
First, enforcing the current version of the firearm-enhancement statute against Mr. Baldwin
would violate the Ex Post Facto clauses of the both the United States and New Mexico
Constitutions, See U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 3; i art. I, § 10, el. 1, NM. Const, art. II, § 19. Those
clauses apply not only to laws that create new offenses, but also to laws that increase punishment
for existing offenses. As the New Mexico Supreme Court has explained, “a statute thaStare
the punishment allowable for a previously committed offense violates the ex post facto ban.”
v. Ordunez, 2012-NMS\
124, § 17, 283 P.3d 282. Indeed, the United States Supreme Court has
even held that it would be unconstitutional to retroactively apply advisory sentencing guidelines.
See Peugh v. United States, 569 U.S. 530, 532-33 (2013). As both high courts have put it, “‘[tJhe
Ex Post Facto Clause flatly prohibits retroactive application of penal legislation.” Ordinez, 2012-
NMSC-024, J 14 (quoting Landgraf v. USI Film Prods., 311 U.S. 244, 266 (1994)),
Given those long-settled constitutional limitations, retroactively applying an enhancement
that increases the basic sentence for a charged offense by five years (from eighteen months to six
and a half years) would be flagrantly unconstitutional. But this Court does not even need to reach
that question to dismiss the enhancement, Both “the presumption against retroactive legislation”
and “the requirement that courts must try to adopt an interpretation that upholds the
constitutionality of the statute” require construing the May 2022 amendment not to apply to
offenses committed before its enactment. Ordunez, 2012-NMSC-024, ff] 14, 20. And nothing in
the statutory text suggests that the Legislature intended the law to apply retroactively
Second, the government lacks any legitimate basis to charge Mr. Baldwin under the version
of the firearm-enhancement statute that existed at the time of the accident. As explained above,
that enhancement applies only where the defendant acted “with intent to intimidate or injure a
person.” NMSA 1978, § 31-18-16(D) (2020). The government's statement of probable cause
nowhere alleges that Mr. Baldwin acted with such an i
ent. To the contrary, the factual allegations.
are flatly inconsistent with an intent to injure or intimidate. The statement alleges that at the time
the weapon was discharged, Mr, Baldwin “was practicing drawing and pointing the weapon forthe scene with
guidance and instruction from Halyna Hutchins and Joel Souza,” who “were
viewing the practice scene on a monitor attached to the camera.” Probable Cause Statement at 2.
And the statement further alleges that “[hJad BALDWIN performed the required safety checks
with the armorer, REED, this tragedy would not have occurred.” /d. at 5. Those allegations make
clear that the tragic death of Ms, Hutchins we ident that occurred while Mr. Baldwin was
san
practicing a scene and that he did not act with the intent to intimidate or injure another person.
For that reason, the government lacks any legitimate basis to charge the version of the
firearm enhancement that existed at the
me of the accident. Accordingly, the enhancement should
not be bound over.
Mr. Baldwin has good cause to seek a judicial resolution of this purely legal question as
soon as possible. For one, the court should not sign a bindover that includes an unconstitutional
enhancement (as applied), or an enhancement that is inapplicable on its face, simply because the
government made a basic legal error in its charging decision.
Moreover, the District Attorney and the special prosecutor in this case have repeatedly
stated to media outlets that Mr. Baldwi
facing many years in prison, while in reality he faces
zero to eighteen months, even if this Court concludes at the preliminary hearing that probable
cause supports the involuntary-manslaughter charges,* Their public statements could potentially
ee Interview by Sean Hannity with Andrea Reeb (Jan, 21, 2023),
hups://www.foxnews.com/video/63 190062221 12 (special prosecutor misstating that “there would
be the mandatory five years in prison if [Mr. Baldwin] was convicted if they find that he used a
firearm”); Interview by Jeanine Pirro with Mary Carmack-Altwies and Andrea Reeb (Jan. 19,
2023), _https://twitter.com/JudgeTeanine/status/1616239686262947841 (District Attomey
commenting that the firearm enhancement of five years “is in fact mandatory”).taint a jury pool by “heightenfing] public condemnation of the accused” for no legitimate purpose
whatsoever given that the statements rest solely on the government's own legal error. Nat'l
Prosecution Standards, NAT"L. DIST. ATTNY Assoc. (3d ed.) § 2-14.2. Precisely to avoid that sort
of prejudice, the New Mexico Rules of Professional Responsibility prohibit a prosecutor from
making an extrajudicial statement that she “knows or reasonably should know . .. is false” and
explains that statements are likely to have a “prejudicial effect” when they discuss “the fact that a
defendant has been charged with a crime” without noting the presumption of innocence. N.M. R.
Prof I, Cond. 16-306(A)(1) & cmt. 4(6). A judicial resolution of the question of the applicability
of the firearm enhancement now would help prevent further erroneous and prejudicial public
statements,CONCLUSION
Mr. Baldwin respectfully asks the Court to decline to bind over the firearm enhancement.
Date: February 10, 2023 Respectfully submitted,
QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & SULLIVAN, LLP
By: _/s/ Luke Nikas
Luke Nikas (admitted pro hae vice)
Alex Spiro (admitted pro hae vice)
$1 Madison Avenue, 22nd Floor
New York, NY 10010
Tel: 212-849-7000
Fax: 212-849-7100
lukenikas@quinnemanuel,com
[email protected]
John F. Bash (admitted pro hac vice)
300 W. 6th St., Suite 2010
Austin, TX 78701
Tel: 713-221-7000
Fax: 737-667-6110
[email protected]
BAILEY, LEBLANC & LANE, PC
Heather M, LeBlanc
823 Gold Ave. SW
Albuquerque, NM 87102
Tel: 505-331-7222
[email protected]
Counsel for DefendantCERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
Thereby certify that on February 10, 2023, I electronically filed the foregoing with the
Clerk of the Court using the Court’s electronic filing system, which caused all participants and
counsel of record to be served, as more fully reflected on the Notice of Electronic Filing,
s/ Heather LeBlanc
Heather LeBlanc
10