Police Procedurals—Telling Stories from the Other Side of the Tape: Art Pitman, Wednesday April 13, 7:00 pm EDT
As a retired police officer who enjoys reading and writing police procedurals, Art will explore some of the challenges and opportunities for authors in this distinct genre of mystery fiction. During his presentation he will discuss:
• What is a police procedural? Resources/Constraints for your main character.
• Challenges: Can accuracy be a bad thing? Details that move the story forward, details that do not.
• Opportunities: Lots of conflict to write about! Bad guys, lawyers, co-workers, witnesses, supervisors, bureaucracy, “stress” (see Dr. Kevin Gilmartin – hypervigilance).
Art Pittman is a member of Capital Crime Writers, with a passion for reading and writing mystery fiction. He has a law degree and has retired from law enforcement after 32 years of service. During his career he worked on homicide files, conducted internal investigations, performed traffic duties, protected prime ministers, attended domestic disputes, and participated in drug raids. And, during a brief secondment, he worked for Alberta Justice as a prosecutor for traffic and criminal cases. As his final job in law enforcement, he served as a full-time adjudicator for appeals of discipline and discharge cases involving police officers. Throughout his career Art gave presentations on search and seizure, investigative techniques, police leadership, and police misconduct. Art has written scripts for training videos on the law of search and seizure and published an article on proceeds of crime investigations in the Criminal Law Quarterly. He now enjoys teaching as a guest lecturer at the Canadian Police College, and writing short story mysteries (unpublished) with a focus on police procedurals. He currently lives with his wife in Ottawa.
Check out his mystery writing website at aepittman.ca.