Description
These spooky comprehension passages are perfect for Halloween! Explore five true crime cases with the nonfiction articles provided in this bundle. Cases include: “The Crooked Queen of Crypto,” “Marty and the Shrink,” “Death by Immurement,” and more! Suitable for online learning with digital worksheets for Google Classroom®.
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Included with this True Crime Nonfiction Bundle:
- 5 True Crime Nonfiction Articles
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- “Death by Immurement,” “The Crooked Queen of Cryptocurrency,” “The Lover in the Attic,” “Marty and the Shrink,” and “Brooklyn Bridge for Sale”
- Lexile levels range between 900L – 1250L
- Comprehension and Discussion Questions – Digital & Print
- 5 Targeted Literacy Activities – Digital & Print
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- Practice reading strategies with the various activities provided
- Students will make predictions, write in different forms, verify facts within the text, and more
- Detailed Answer Keys and Mentor Texts
- Teacher Instructions for using this resource
How to use these True Crime Nonfiction Articles:
Explore these true crime stories involving deception, conmanship, manipulation, and eccentricity with these Halloween reading comprehension passages! Students will read about attic-bound lovers, cryptocurrency scams, and other curious true crime cases from history. Students will also practice literacy using comprehension questions and literacy activities provided with each nonfiction article. The True Crime Nonfiction collection encourages students to examine the psychology of deception and the moral boundaries of human behavior through real-world examples. These articles transform classroom reading into an immersive experience where students not only analyze text but also evaluate credibility, motives, and ethics. The combination of reading comprehension and critical discussion builds deeper engagement with nonfiction while aligning with literacy standards.
Nonfiction Articles included:
- “Marty and the Shrink” – 900L-1050L
Explore the lives of Marty Markowitz and Dr. Herschkopf with this true crime reading comprehension passage! This activity develops reading comprehension, inference, and discussion skills through a bizarre true crime case. Students will read about Dr. Herschkopf’s manipulation of Marty Markowitz, a wealthy man who almost lost it all through their patient-doctor relationship. Students will complete the Anticipation Guide to activate prior knowledge, spark curiosity, and make predictions about the text. This True Crime Nonfiction story highlights manipulation and psychological control, showing how authority can be misused. The pre-reading and post-reading comprehension questions guide students in analyzing power dynamics and understanding the dangers of exploitation. Teachers can facilitate classroom discussions that connect this case to themes of trust and influence in real life, helping students apply their insights beyond the text. - “Brooklyn Bridge for Sale” – 950L-1100L
If someone offered you a famous landmark, would you buy it? This nonfiction article explores the wild true crime story of George C. Parker, a con artist who “sold” the Brooklyn Bridge. Students will be captivated by this outrageous con as they build reading comprehension and critical thinking skills. They will also practice summarizing using the TMST Method to write a summary paragraph. This True Crime Nonfiction article blends humor and history, encouraging students to think about gullibility and persuasion. Through guided literacy exercises, students identify persuasive techniques and analyze how Parker’s scams reflected societal attitudes at the time. The inclusion of summarizing tasks helps students develop concise, analytical writing skills, turning an entertaining story into a meaningful academic exercise. Teachers can extend learning by comparing Parker’s schemes to modern digital scams, reinforcing critical thinking and media awareness. - “The Lover in the Attic” – 1000L-1150L
Dolly Oesterreich was a peculiar woman with a deep, dark secret; a married housewife and a socialite, Dolly’s story proves that there is more than meets the eye. Students will read about how Dolly managed to keep an attic-bound lover hidden from her husband for years. Students will practice informational writing by crafting a news article about the case using the News Report Graphic Organizer provided. This True Crime Nonfiction narrative emphasizes hidden motives, secrecy, and human complexity. It provides an opportunity for students to explore the blurred line between morality and desire while developing journalistic writing skills. Teachers can guide students to analyze tone and objectivity in reporting, comparing how facts are presented in different media sources. This article also sparks discussion about narrative bias and reliability, teaching students to evaluate how nonfiction storytelling can shape perception. - “The Crooked Queen of Crypto” – 1050L-1200L
Explore the deceptive life of Ruja Ignatova, a Harvard graduate who turned to a life of crime. Students will read about Ignatova’s background and how she managed to scam thousands of investors with her fraudulent OneCoin cryptocurrency. Students will build digital literacy skills using the “Verify Facts in a Text” activity, testing their ability to spot Ruja’s deceptive lies. This True Crime Nonfiction article merges contemporary relevance with timeless lessons about greed and deception. It’s particularly effective for teaching critical evaluation of online information and the importance of verifying sources. Students learn to cross-reference facts, identify unreliable claims, and question credibility—vital skills in the digital age. Teachers can connect this story to lessons on cybersecurity, personal finance, or ethics in media, making it an excellent cross-curricular tool that goes beyond reading comprehension. - “Death by Immurement” – 1150L-1250L
Imagine being buried alive; this terrifying fate is known as “death by immurement,” and was once practiced voluntarily by a sect of Japanese Buddhist monks. Once upon a time, the now-criminalized act of self-mummification was a religious rite of passage. Using their understanding of the article, students will complete a Procedural Writing Task that reconstructs the sokushinbutsu process in their own words. This True Crime Nonfiction article takes a historical and cultural approach to crime and punishment, inviting students to analyze how faith and law intersect. The procedural writing task develops sequencing and explanatory writing skills while prompting reflection on cultural relativism and ethics. Teachers can extend discussion by comparing this ancient ritual with modern examples of extremism or devotion, allowing students to think critically about moral frameworks across time periods.
True Crime Riddle Activities
Challenge your students to solve riddles and practice inference skills with these reading comprehension activities! Students will decode word-based riddles linked to each true crime story. This activity is ideal for literacy centers, fast-finishers, sub plans, or as a creative way to reinforce nonfiction reading comprehension and inference skills. The True Crime Nonfiction riddles build logical reasoning and strengthen inferential thinking while adding a fun, interactive twist to traditional comprehension work. Teachers can use them as warm-ups, review activities, or differentiated learning extensions that cater to diverse learning styles. These riddles also promote problem-solving and deductive reasoning, helping students make connections between textual details and broader themes of deception and discovery.
True Crime Narrative Video Project
Do your students dream of becoming YouTube stars? Practice media production and narrative writing with this True Crime Video Creation Project! This project-based learning assignment blends media literacy, narrative writing, and digital storytelling. Students will research real cases, write scripts, storyboard scenes, and produce engaging true crime videos. As part of the True Crime Nonfiction collection, this activity transforms classroom learning into a hands-on creative challenge. Students apply narrative structure, tone, and pacing while developing digital communication skills. Teachers can evaluate both technical and literary elements, such as how effectively the script builds suspense or conveys factual accuracy. This project fosters collaboration, creativity, and authentic learning, making nonfiction come alive through storytelling and multimedia production.
✨ Kindly note that due to copyright restrictions, this resource is not editable, except for the files specifically labelled as editable. This is a common practice within the online marketplace in order to protect the clip artists and software providers that have authorized their intellectual property for the development of this resource.
See what other teachers are saying about this True Crime Nonfiction Bundle:
“My students did this the weird week of Halloween & they loved the fdifferent pace and anticipating the next story for the nextday- it was good for finding details in a text etc and had them engaged. Thanks!”
– Marjorie A.
⭒ For classrooms utilizing Google Classroom® ⭒
To access the digital version of these worksheets, simply follow the instructions within the resource to copy the files directly to your Google Drive®.







Marjorie A. –
My students did this the weird week of Hallween & they loved the fdifferent pace and anticipating the next story for the nextday- it was good for finding details in a text etc and had them engaged. Thanks!
Amber A. –
This bundle provided choice for my students and kept them engaged in the materials. Thank you!
The Write Resources –
The readings were engaging and the questions were great.
Tiffany F. –
This is such a high interest engaging activity. The students loved it.
Catherine M. –
My students love true crime and enjoy these passages.
Alison K. –
Super engaging and perfect to use in October. My students really enjoyed these passages.
Amber H. –
I love the variety in the storylines of these haunting texts. A great way to build comprehension skills while hooking students in with cool stories.