
Skyler Saunders
Bio
I will be publishing a story every Tuesday. Make sure you read the exclusive content each week to further understand the stories.
In order to read these exclusive stories, become a paid subscriber of mine today! Thanks….
S.S.
Stories (2944)
Filter by community
QR Code Murders: Joyous Occasion. Content Warning.
After some heavy editing, the video went up for the world to see. The blurriness looked like whirls of water. The title cards blocked the names of the agents and the detective. The scene of the shooter, made to look as monstrous as possible, focused on her face. It was a face of non-value. Striking, and mannish, it conveyed a story of deep hatred. The video garnered over a billion views in a week.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Fiction
QR Code Murders: Publishing Platform. Content Warning.
With the fire stamped out, the three of them vacated the apartment. “Where are we going?” asked Tamil. Yawquisha already knew. Kim was taking them to the station to be safe and sound from the rioters. They wanted to deface the department, but knew they wouldn’t have the manpower to resist riot gear and more tear gas.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Fiction
Eyes Behind Shades. Content Warning.
When the cool running water stopped, she smiled. Lipstick painted her face. Fuschia painted those bulbous lips and black eyeliner shaded under her pupils. She sipped Luc Belaire wine. She puffed from a vaporizer. A grin slid onto her face like a deathstalker slinking through the sand to find other scorpions. She wrapped up her makeup kit and dressed in black latex.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Fiction
QR Code Murders: Raven Ascending. Content Warning.
She called out like all hell. “Put the weapon down slowly….” Kim reassured the assailant. Yawquisha stood in her confident stance and recorded everything. St. Kitts and Darby ran up to the action followed by three squad cars.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Fiction
QR Code Murders: Forensics. Content Warning.
Wind swept down and made it a cooler night. The summer break neared an end. Joyful, Yawuisha luxuriated in the fact that she had completed her master’s degree in police work without ever wearing a badge or holding a service pistol. Armed with her own camera and an editing suite, she knew that her masterclass was either going to continue or Kim and her companions would put an end to this madness.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Fiction
Delaware Teen Gunned Down; School Family Mourns Again
Poems read by mothers while their children lay horizontally in boxes can be hard to take. It’s especially hard when the same community must endure the elimination of another life. Mother of Kaylee Robinson, 18, Danielle Hammond addressed the Laurel High School in Delaware with her writings. With a declaration for justice to be delivered to the evildoers who snatched her son’s life away, she stood strong.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Criminal
Delaware Murder-for-hire trial starts in Wilmington involving money and revenge
An eighteen-year-old, Shiheem Durham, received a bullet in his skull in Dover, Delaware in 2020. While sitting in a Ford Explorer, he got shot because of a retaliatory action against Jamil Green. Those who found their way to the news article, including Deonte Robinson, 22, Khalil Dixon, 26, Tyrie Burton, 24, and Jason Calhum, 20, who is said to be the gunman behind Durham’s death.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Criminal
Lines and Lives in Blue
That “thin blue line” on those black and white flags signifies the number of police officers who have fallen in the line of duty. Corporal Keith Heacock should have survived his wounds in Delmar, Delaware. He became an emblem embedded in the memories of his fellow officers and of course his family. He was murdered by Randon Wilkkerson because he was in a drug-induced manic phase. What does this mean? Superior Court Judge Craig Karsnitz found Wilkerson guilty on 16 charges including first degree murder and murder of a law enforcement officer. Wilkerson chose to not have a jury present during the speedy trial.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Criminal
A Cold Case Rekindled: Men Get 15 Years in Alleged Murder-for-Hire
While the specifics of the case seem vague according to court functions, what is known is that Murad Diggs and Raheem Brown plead guilty of a slaying which took place in 2016. The seven year difference meant that the case of Terrence Kinard’s murder went cold. Things got warmer because of the Wilmington Police. They voiced in 2022 that the pair had been the killers. Through sage cop work, they brought together a collage of different elements that made it possible for the arrests and convictions of the two other men involved in the murder.
By Skyler Saunders2 years ago in Criminal