Inktober day 1: “Open Wound” by Uttering
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Inktober day 1: “Open Wound” by Uttering
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Uttering:
consists of unlawfully and intentionally passing off a false document (forgery) to the actual or potential prejudice of another
...so B.A.P chose to perform Wake Me Up in front of political officials and leaders
Van Hughes presents: Uttering
The intro with the guitar it's so power
A great rock song
"This is the 2nd single from my upcoming album Weird Dreams. It has a Brit pop/rock vibe". Van Hughes
Listen to Uttering by vanmhughes #np on #SoundCloud
Van said:
I'm now starting a solo artist career and have finished my debut album Weird Dreams. It's an eclectic journey of 18 art pop/rock tracks. I wrote, played, produced, and mixed the whole record. I'm dropping singles before the full album is released at the end of summer 2026.
"BOGUS CHEQUE ARTIST GOES TO PENITENTIARY," Weekly British Whig. December 19, 1921. Page 7. --- John A. Clark Sentenced to Two Years by Police Magistrate Farrell. ---- John A. Clark, who pleaded guilty a week ago to passing a bogus cheque on Arthur Horwitz, of the Lion clothing store, came up again in the police court on Friday morning and pleaded guilty to two other charges of a similar nature. Magistrate Farrell imposed a sentence of two years in the Portsmouth penitentiary on one charge, two years on another, and one year on a third, sentence to run concurrently.
Clark admitted passing a worthless cheque for $15 on James Hounslow, a Barrie street butcher. He also put over a bogus cheque on T. J. O'Connor.
Magistrate Farrell said he had found that this was not the first of- fence of this kind Clark had committed. He had apparently been in the game before, and it now looked as if he was going into it on a whole- sale basis, as there were a series of charges against him.
Ivan Burns, on remand for two weeks, and who is alleged to be the "Jack the Hugger," who has been annoying women and young girls in various parts of the city, was further remanded for a day.
[Clark was 24, married, from the area, a factory worker, and had been in the local jail before. He was convict #H-986 and worked in the machine shop. He was paroled in December 1924.]
"FEARS LEST ST. PETER MAY BE BE NEXT JUDGE," Toronto Star. July 27, 1933. Page 25. ---- Walter Lasher Claims Burwash Inquiry Prejudices Him in County Jails ---- Specal to The Star Hamilton, July 26. - Pleading not to be sent to the county jail on remand because it was his complaint that had brought about the Burwash investigation, Walter Lasher, Montreal, to-day in police court was remanded one week on one charge of forgery and uttering and one of false pretences.
Bail was set at $5,000 cash.
"Please don't send me to the county jail for the remand," Lasher asked. "I am the man on whose complaint the Burwash inquiry was instituted and, if I am sent to any county jail, St. Peter will be the next judge I will face. County jail officials are appointed by the province. Let me stay in the police cells."
"What inquiry are you talking about?" Magistrate Burbidge asked. "I don't know anything about it."
Lasher said he had had a "tough time" during the inquiry and provincial authorities had tried to drive him out of Canada and prevent his sister from giving him shelter. The magistrate suggested Lasher had a persecution complex and said he was unable to influence the police in their administrative arrangements.
"OTHER CLAIMS," Hamilton Spectator. September 16, 1933. Page 21. --- Made By Walter Lasher After Period in Jail ---- Other claims were made by Walter Lasher, alias Lionel Bedeur, on whose trial on charges of false pretenses and forgery and uttering the county court jury could not agree yesterday. besides those which he made under the fire of the crown's cross-questions in the witness box, it was reported at the office of Sheriff Leeming A. Carr this morning. Lasher claimed that when he was first admitted to Barton street jail, his dinner plate was all alone at one end of the table.
"I thought I was going to be poisoned, so I wouldn't eat," he stated. "I was told I could pick my own plate and sit anywhere I liked. I knew that they wouldn't poison all the prisoners just to get me so I started to eat something."
In the box yesterday Lasher claimed that he hadn't eaten for nine straight days at the city jail and referred to his part in the Burwash prison investigation.