In 1948 he portrayed a doctor in the film Test Tube Babies, explaining to a young couple that there is no shame in test-tube fertilization (a similar role to that in the subsequent Glen or Glenda).
In 1951, Farrell, along with everyone else on the film set of Paris After Midnight, was swept up in a police vice raid, which caused him professional embarrassment with his courtroom career.
[2] His later years were spent in business, such as operating a lumber mill in South Dakota and rental properties in Los Angeles, California.
[4] Anthony had briefly been a police officer in Stanton, California, until March 1983 when he fatally shot 5-year-old Patrick Andrew Mason in his home, mistaking the boy's toy gun for a real weapon.
[5] Sperl quit the force, claiming post-traumatic stress disorder and was awarded a disability pension soon [6] after being cleared of wrongdoing.