‘Rust’ crew worker bit by spider shutting down set could lose arm: report

A security guard speaks to a person from the Office of the Medical Investigator at the entrance to the Bonanza Creek Ranch on October 22, 2021, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
A security guard speaks to a person from the Office of the Medical Investigator at the entrance to the Bonanza Creek Ranch on October 22, 2021, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Photo credit Sam Wasson/Getty Images

A crew member from Alec Baldwin’s ‘Rust’ movie in New Mexico could lose their arm after being bit by a spider while shutting down the film set, a report said.

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A brown recluse spider bit Jason Miller, a lamp operator and pipe rigger, as he and other workers tore down equipment for the film, reports said. It's unclear when the crew member was bit. Producers said the movie would no longer continue production after the on-set, fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins last month.

Brown recluse spider bites are rare, but their venom is dangerously poisonous and can sometimes cause serious wounds, according to entomologists at the University of Kentucky. It lives in the Midwest and south-central U.S. Similar species live in southern California.

A fundraiser organized for Miller online reportedly said most of the cells and tissue in his arm have died, and sepsis is now threatening his limb.

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“He has been hospitalized and endured multiple surgeries each day as doctors do their best to stop the infection and try to save his arm from amputation,” the page read, according to Sky News. “Under worse circumstances, he loses his arm.”

“It will be a very long road to recovery for Jason if the medical team is able to save his arm,” the statement continued.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: Sam Wasson/Getty Images