>From today's Inky:
 
 
Police search for killer of man found on rooftop
By Vernon Clark
Inquirer Staff Writer
 
 
 

CLEM MURRAY / Inquirer Staff Photographer 
Transients gain entry to Croydon Apartments, located  at the corner of 49th 
and Locust Streets, from the rear entrance. A 27-year-old  man was found 
murdered on the roof Monday morning. 
 


Police reported yesterday they were still seeking the  killer of a 
27-year-old man found beaten to death on the roof of an abandoned  West 
Philadelphia 
apartment building that has become a hangout for transients  from as far away 
as 
the West Coast.  
Timothy Bradly, who police said was likely a transient, was pronounced dead  
at about 6:30 a.m. Monday on the roof of the Croydon Apartments on 49th Street 
 near Locust Street. He had suffered head trauma, police said.  
Police said officers found Bradly after receiving a call at 6:10 a.m. Monday  
indicating that someone on the roof needed emergency medical treatment. 
Police  said they had no suspects.  
Police Sgt. D.F. Pace said the building, which contains dozens of apartments, 
 has been a haven for transients over the last few years.  
Pace said people who knew Bradly reported that he lived in the 100 block of  
North Columbus Boulevard. Pace said it was unlikely that he had a permanent  
address.  
"Some of them come from as far away as California," Pace said of the  
drifters. "They find an abandoned building and hang out there."  
The building, which has about six floors, has many boarded-up windows. Other  
windows are open, the panes long since gone.  
The front courtyard of the building is blocked by a tall black iron fence,  
apparently to keep people out. The windows on the first floor are covered by  
black iron bars in addition to being boarded up with plywood.  
The back of the building is a few feet from the sports fields of West  
Philadelphia High School. A broken metal door was wide open, allowing easy  
access 
to the building, and a hole in a chain-link fence allows people to enter  the 
debris-strewn rear yard.  
Neighbors said they had long voiced concern about drifters staying in the  
building.  
"We were complaining about them for months," said Cynthia Jacobs, who lives  
in an apartment building across from the street from the abandoned building.  
Jacobs, who has lived in the block for seven years, said the drifters stayed  
to themselves but "they would get rowdy at times."  
 
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