Murder victim, Trevor Bradley
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Fifteen years ago the body of Trevor Bradley was discovered in his burned out car near the village of Melverley in North Shropshire. Since then West Mercia Police have been trying to find out what happened to him and why he was murdered. In the latest development in the case his body was exhumed from Ludlow cemetery on the morning of Wednesday July 15. It is believed further tests are to be carried out on Mr Bradley. Detective Inspector Andy Parsons who is in charge of the cold case review said Mr Bradley's family were being kept up to date with developments and the body would be reburied on Friday, 17 July. For thirteen years investigations into the murder of Trevor Bradley stalled. Then West Mercia Police re-opened the investigation into the mystery.
At the time, DI Parsons said: "We are currently working on the strong possibility that there was more than one person involved in the death and that they were well known to Mr Bradley." The 53-year-old dealer travelled across the county buying and selling antiques, jewellery and bric-a-brac. His body was found in his white Vauxhall Nova in a field between the hamlets of Crosslanes and Kinnerley, near Melverley on April, 27 1994. The vehicle had been seen on fire earlier in the day at the spot where it was found. Unconfirmed sightings The Police said Mr Bradley had been seen in Monkmoor and Shrewsbury Town Centre the day before he died and there were unconfirmed sightings of him at Leominster bingo hall later that day. Soon after the cold case investigation began, a reward of £10,000 was offered to try and persuade potential witnesses to come forward. " I am convinced there are a number of people who have key information that could help the investigation team. I would ask those people to examine their consciences now and come forward." DI Parsons said.
The exhumation site at Ludlow
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Speaking to Radio Shropshire when the cold case investigation began, Amos Bradley, one of Trevor Bradley's 16 brothers and five sisters, said he was well known locally and had regular customers in the area. He had never heard anyone speaking badly of his brother and could not understand why anyone would want to murder him. "Whether it's gone through a bad deal, or whether he done summat dirty on some deal, I can't see him doing that, how he's made enemies, I don't know." he said. Amos Bradley said he was sure that no-one locally was responsible for his brother's death: "I don't think it's happened in this town. It's happened somewhere else. He's got involved with something in another town." "Within a day, knowing this town, we'd have got know about it." he added.
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