Police Investigate Murder at University of Washington Apartment Complex
Introduction
Law enforcement agencies are currently investigating the death of a person found at the Nordheim Court Apartments on Sunday night.
Main Body
The incident happened around 10:10 p.m. in the laundry room of building 7 at Nordheim Court. After the body was discovered, the Seattle Police Department and University of Washington Police (UWPD) started a homicide investigation. Detective Eric Muñoz confirmed that the victim was a 19-year-old transgender woman; however, police are still checking whether she was a student or a visitor. Because of the crime, residents were told to stay inside their homes while police searched the area for evidence. This order was lifted shortly before 1:00 a.m. Furthermore, authorities have released a description of a suspect. They are looking for a Black male, between 5'6" and 5'8" with a slim build, black hair, and a beard. He was reportedly wearing blue jeans, a button-up shirt, and a dark blue vest. No one has been arrested yet, and the exact cause of death is still being analyzed.
Conclusion
The investigation is still ongoing as police continue to search for the suspect matching the description.
Learning
⚡️ The 'B2 Leap': Mastering Formal Connectors
At the A2 level, you likely use and, but, and so. To move toward B2, you need to use Logical Bridges. These words change how a reader perceives the relationship between two ideas.
1. Adding Information (The 'And' Upgrade) Instead of saying "Police are looking for a man and they have a description," the text uses:
*"Furthermore, authorities have released a description..."
- Why it's B2: Furthermore signals that the next piece of information is not just additional, but important and additive. It creates a professional, report-like tone.
2. Contrast and Unexpectedness (The 'But' Upgrade) Look at how the text handles the victim's identity:
"...confirmed that the victim was a 19-year-old transgender woman; however, police are still checking..."
- Why it's B2: However creates a sharp pivot. It tells the reader: "I gave you a fact, but now here is a complication."
3. Cause and Effect (The 'So' Upgrade) Rather than saying "There was a crime, so residents stayed inside," the text uses:
"Because of the crime, residents were told to stay inside..."
- The Logic Shift: By starting the sentence with Because of [+ noun], the writer puts the emphasis on the reason immediately. This is a hallmark of academic and journalistic English.
🚀 Quick Application Strategy Next time you write a story or a report, try this replacement map:
AndFurthermore/MoreoverButHowever/NeverthelessSoConsequently/Because of [X]