'Bow, Clara' and Richard Arlen both suffered minor injuries from richocheting bullets. (Special effects "squibs" had not yet been invented, so marksmen would really shoot near the actors.)
This film is presumed lost.
A surviving script of the film has some scenes of an electric chair, but all are X'd out, suggesting that they were not used.
In a letter to Richard Arlen, written years later, Clara Bow recalled her arm being grazed by a ricocheting bullet during the production, and said she thought she remembered Arlen getting hit in the leg.
Ernest Booth, the author of the story on which this film was based, was incarcerated at Folsom Penitentiary, serving a life sentence since 1924, when this film was made. He was paroled in 1937 after thirteen years at Folsom.