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Professional Sentences for Police Reports: Part I by Jean Reynolds, Ph.D.
36

Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Dec 02, 2014

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Jean Reynolds

Effective sentences are the building blocks for successful police reports - and they're essential tools as you climb the career ladder in law enforcement. This PowerPoint shows you how to write (and punctuate) two essential sentence patterns.
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Page 1: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Professional Sentences for Police Reports: Part

I

by Jean Reynolds, Ph.D.

Page 2: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Sentences are the basic building materials for police writing.

Page 3: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Writing error-free sentences makes you look

professional.

Page 4: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Professional sentence patterns are especially important as you climb the career ladder in law enforcement.

Page 5: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Today we’re going to look at two useful types of professional sentences.

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Let’s look at the first type of sentence.

Page 7: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Can you see a problem with the sentence below?

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It sounds like “John Henry” is one person. Confusing!

Page 9: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

You probably had to read the sentence twice before it made sense.

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A comma solves the problem:

Page 11: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Here’s a handy rule: Use a comma when a sentence starts with an extra idea.

“While I was interviewing John” is an extra idea.

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A sentence ends with a period.

An extra idea ends with a comma…and then it keeps going.

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You can spot an “extra idea” (which needs a comma) by looking at the first word.If it’s not a person, place, or thing, it’s an “extra idea.”

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“Look at the first word” is a great trick that you’ll use often.

Let’s try another one.

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Confusing, isn’t it? (Was it really raining outside Smith’s shoes?)

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Now the sentence is easy to understand the first time you read it!A comma saves the day.

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“Although it was raining outside” is an extra idea that needs a comma.(You knew a comma was needed when you looked at the first word: Although.)

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Let’s go on to our second professionalsentence pattern.

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Sally is not a very nice person…or did we miss something here?

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Sounds better, doesn’t it?

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Is there a way to fix this sentence to eliminate the confusion?

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Yes! Once again, the answer is a comma.Put a comma at the end of the first sentence:

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Now the sentence makes sense the first time you read it!

Page 24: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Good writers think about that comma every time they join sentences with and.(Incidentally, but works the same way.)

Page 25: Professional Sentence Patterns for Police Reports Part I

Let’s look at another example. Here are two incomplete sentences. Can you see a difference in between them?

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Without the comma, your partner probably suffered an injury:

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Insert the comma, and your partner is probably okay:

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Here’s an example with but. Here are two incomplete sentences. Do you see a difference between them?

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Now you can see that the comma makes a difference!

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Here’s your second handy rule: Use a comma when you join two sentences with and or but.

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You can learn more about professional sentence patterns at

www.YourPoliceWrite.com.

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Everything there is free, and no registration is needed:

www.YourPoliceWrite.com.

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And if you’re looking for a low-cost, practical book that covers sentence patterns, English usage, and police reports…

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Criminal Justice Report Writing is available from www.Amazon.com for just $17.95.

View a free sample online.

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An e-book edition is available from www.Smashwords.com for only $11.99.

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A free Instructor’s Manual is available on request: Send an e-mail to jreynoldswrite at aol.com.