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Writing Crime Stories Jennifer Cox http://cmat240summer.wordpress.com

Lecture 3: Crime stories

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Page 1: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Writing Crime StoriesJennifer Cox

http://cmat240summer.wordpress.com

Page 2: Lecture 3: Crime stories

objectives

• Quiz reminder! On MyClasses from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

• Learn the structure of crime writing

• Go over assignment

• Learn to work together to improve your writing

Page 3: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Crime story prompt

• Open practice prompt from the website

• Read through it carefully

• Keep it handy as we discuss

Page 4: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Most important/interesting info first

• 24 words

• Delayed identification

• No conviction

• No state name needed

• Eye-catching info

• Attribution

A Delmar man was arrested early Tuesday morning after deputies said he was trying to break in to a local bar using a sledgehammer.

Page 5: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Law enforcement

• Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office – deputies

• Salisbury Police Department – police

• Maryland Highway Patrol – troopers

• All - officers

Page 6: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Details next

• List of charges

• Carefully check the name

• Commas – non-essential clause & commas in a series

• One-sentence graf

Jerome Vincent Burgess, 20, was charged with burglary of a business, possession of burglary tools and criminal mischief.

Page 7: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Chronological order

• Attribution (once per graf)

• Omission of unnecessary items (times)

• Distribution of details

• AP style for address

• Still no conviction

• Last name only on subsequent references

Deputies responding to a call of loud noises after a man reported spotting Burgess attempting to break into Brewer’s Pub shortly after 3 a.m., according to a Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office report. He was seen using a sledgehammer to pound on plywood siding near the door of the business, located at 5820 NW 34th St.

Page 8: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Chronological order

• Don’t begin sentence with attribution if you can help it

• “A” report; then “the” report

• Concise, chronological

• Unimportant details omitted

Deputies said Burgess admitted to attempting to get into the business to steal money, according to the report. Burgess had been inside the bar at about midnight and saw business was good.

After talking with a former employee who told him money was kept inside the club overnight, Burgess felt it would be a good time to break in, according to the report.

Page 9: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Law enforcement terms

Burglary, larceny, robbery, theft

• Burglary – entering a building (not necessarily breaking in) and remaining unlawfully with the intention of committing a crime

• Larceny – the legal term for the wrongful taking of property • non-legal = stealing or theft

• Robbery – involves the use of violence or threat in committing larceny

• Theft – larceny that did not involve a threat, violence or plundering

• Use the terms listed in the charges

Page 10: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Least important/last info at the bottom

• Two simple sentences

• Past tense

Burgess was transported to Wicomico County Jail. His bond was set at $12,000.

Page 11: Lecture 3: Crime stories

homework

• Write in inverted pyramid

• Omit unnecessary information

• AP style, grammar, spelling errors = -2

• Fact errors = -10 (check your proper nouns)

Page 12: Lecture 3: Crime stories

Peer editing

Look for:

• Grammar errors• Commas, punctuation, capitalization

• AP style errors• Addresses, ages, city without state

• Summary lede

• Inverted pyramid

• Delayed identification

• Last name only on second reference

Page 13: Lecture 3: Crime stories

homework

• Remember, crime story due at 5 p.m. Friday

• Don’t forget to take your AP style quiz by 9 p.m. tonight

• Your current events/readings quiz will be available from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow

• Read Chapter 18 (Speeches, News Conferences & Meetings)

• Thursday: Covering meetings