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Crime Scriptwriting P

Anna Reyes is a YouTube scriptwriter specializing in dramatic and suspenseful crime narratives, with skills in researching verified crime stories and writing engaging scripts. Her portfolio includes compelling script samples that showcase her ability to create tension and emotional hooks, as well as her fast turnaround time. Anna is eager to collaborate on bringing gripping crime stories to life for YouTube channels.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views3 pages

Crime Scriptwriting P

Anna Reyes is a YouTube scriptwriter specializing in dramatic and suspenseful crime narratives, with skills in researching verified crime stories and writing engaging scripts. Her portfolio includes compelling script samples that showcase her ability to create tension and emotional hooks, as well as her fast turnaround time. Anna is eager to collaborate on bringing gripping crime stories to life for YouTube channels.

Uploaded by

julcelmercado
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Crime Scriptwriting Portfolio – Anna

Reyes
About Me
I'm a dedicated and detail-oriented YouTube scriptwriter with a strong passion for crafting
dramatic, suspenseful, and fact-based narratives in the crime and police genre. I specialize
in faceless YouTube scripts that engage viewers through gripping storytelling and
emotionally charged pacing — inspired by channels like *Dr. Insanity Crime* and *Code
Blue Cam*. I write compelling scripts that keep audiences hooked from the first word to the
last frame.

Skills
- Researching verified crime stories and police bodycam footage
- Writing 500–1000 word documentary-style scripts
- Creating tension, suspense, and emotional hooks
- Adapting tone to match YouTube documentary storytelling
- Fast turnaround time

Script Sample #1: "The Officer Who Didn’t Flinch: The Casey Donavan
Incident"
"You’re not going to shoot me... right?" Casey Donavan whispered, as the officer’s flashlight
glared into the broken-down van. The engine was still warm. In his hand: a screwdriver. But
under the floor mat, the real threat lay hidden.

On August 5, 2022, Officer Reynolds responded to a call about a suspicious vehicle parked
near a closed hardware store in rural Kentucky. What started as a welfare check turned into
a near-deadly standoff.

As Officer Reynolds approached the van, Casey shifted his body, concealing his right hand.
Bodycam footage shows the officer calmly engaging, buying time as backup approached.
Unknown to him, Casey had outstanding warrants for assault with a deadly weapon. The
van's stolen plates were the final nail.

When backup arrived, Casey lunged forward—not with the screwdriver, but reaching for a
loaded Glock 19 under the mat. Officer Reynolds did not flinch. One command: "Drop it!"
Three tense seconds. Casey blinked. Then dropped the weapon.
This footage would later be used in training officers on the power of restraint under
pressure.

Script Sample #2: "He Thought It Was Just a Routine Stop... Until the K9
Unit Arrived"
It was 11:42 PM. A red Toyota Corolla rolled through a stop sign near Interstate 27. Officer
Bell initiated a standard traffic stop. License, registration, routine questioning. Everything
seemed normal.

But Officer Bell noticed something off. The driver, Marcus Tillman, avoided eye contact. He
trembled. His story was rehearsed.

"Mind if I run my K9 around the car?" Bell asked. Marcus shrugged. "Sure."

The dog circled once... twice... then sat firmly at the passenger door. That’s when Bell called
for backup. What they found in the trunk shocked even veteran officers: 4 kilos of uncut
heroin, stashed under baby blankets.

Marcus Tillman was later linked to a larger trafficking network stretching from Texas to
Chicago. His stop, caught entirely on dashcam, went viral for being the moment a massive
case cracked open.

Script Sample #3: "She Vanished After One Call — The 911 Recording
Revealed Everything"
On January 14, 2019, 26-year-old Emily Voss called 911 from her apartment in Tampa,
Florida. "He's outside... I don't know how he found me again." Those were the last words she
was ever known to speak.

Police arrived 6 minutes later. The door was locked. No signs of forced entry. No Emily. Her
phone was found in the sink, soaked. One shattered lamp. No blood.

Two weeks passed. Nothing.

Then, an off-duty officer scrolling bodycam footage from a separate burglary case noticed a
figure matching Emily’s stalker walking past a nearby gas station—10 minutes before her
call.

Cross-referencing traffic cams led them to an abandoned motel 12 miles away. There, in
Room 203, they found her bracelet. DNA on a hairbrush confirmed he had been there.

Emily's body was never recovered, but the suspect was charged with kidnapping and
unlawful imprisonment. The 911 call became haunting evidence of a real-time abduction.
Contact
Email: [email protected]
Telegram: inib_8

What's App: 63+9649587539

Thank you for reviewing my portfolio. I look forward to working with you to bring gripping,
dramatic crime stories to life for your channel.

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