I will be the voice of dissent (again), but what if the actor that pulled the trigger was dirt-poor Joe Unknown? Let's assume Alec Baldwin was only the producer, and another guy was handed a "cold gun" that should've been checked by the armorer? Would this level of attention and desire to have the man hang be present in that case? I suspect that wouldn't be the case.
I'm well aware Baldwin is not liked by this community (and a good part of the general public), for whatever reasons. But at the end of the day, he was on a set where guns were fired as part of the process to make the movie. He was handed a "cold gun" that should've been checked by two other people, one of which was specifically hired for thst purpose. His actions, while not to the standards of responsible gun owners handling live guns on a regular basis, were not the worst. Were live rounds even supposed to be present on the set? I don't think so, but I'm happy to be proven wrong.
If I take my car from the dealer after a brake job, am I supposed to inspect every line and every bolt myself before I start driving? If the brakes fail and I kill a pedestrian, is that my fault because I didn't inspect the newly serviced brakes? Yes, maybe I should've exercised caution for the first few miles, but I had pros do that job for a reason.
I can see how an actor without a lot of real-life gun experience might let his guard down. Muscle memory could definitely kick in and pull the trigger without even realizing it (how many of you stick drivers stomped your left foot on the floor searching for that third pedal when you drove an automatic for the first time in a while?), because that's what would happen when the cameras were rolling. That gun was supposed to be cold, not even loaded with blanks. That was the armorer's job to ensure that, first and foremost. And I recall the assistant director was also supposed to check it. Two failures in a row.
Does Baldwin bear some level of fault as the producer? Despite the court's findings, I say he does. They had accidental discharges (of blanks, I think) on the set in the preceding days. Doesn't seem like there was any safety stand-down and tightening of safety processes. That's on him in my book. Was that not done because live rounds were not supposed to be on the set, so the perceived safety risk was lower?