THE NEW YORK TIMES – The effort to prosecute Alec Baldwin for the fatal shooting of a cinematographer in 2021 ended on Monday when the special prosecutor withdrew her appeal of the judge’s decision to dismiss the involuntary manslaughter charge during the actor’s trial.
The prosecutor, Kari T. Morrissey, said in a news release that she was abandoning the case because the New Mexico attorney general’s office, which handles appeals of criminal cases, did not intend to “exhaustively pursue the appeal.”
“The state’s efforts to continue to litigate the case in a fair and comprehensive manner have been met with multiple barriers that have compromised its ability to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law,” the news release said.
Luke Nikas and Alex Spiro, lawyers for Mr. Baldwin, said in a statement that the decision was the “final vindication of what Alec Baldwin and his attorneys have said from the beginning — this was an unspeakable tragedy but Alec Baldwin committed no crime.”
The case in Santa Fe, N.M., was upended on the third day of Mr. Baldwin’s trial in July after his lawyers argued that the state had not properly disclosed certain evidence.
Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer of the First Judicial District determined that the evidence — ammunition delivered to the local sheriff’s office months before the trial — had been “intentionally and deliberately” withheld from the defense.
She found that the state’s actions amounted to prosecutorial misconduct and dismissed the case without the potential for it to be retried.
Ms. Morrissey pushed back on the judge’s decision, filing a notice of appeal.
Although she conceded that the state had failed to provide the defense with the ammunition in question, she argued that the evidence was not material to Mr. Baldwin’s defense and questioned the extent to which his legal team knew about it before the trial …