A retired Philadelphia couple
was strangled by two men hired to do household chores after the wife
caught one trying to steal money,
authorities said Monday.
Rufus and
Gladys Perry, who relatives said had been married more than 40 years,
knew one of their alleged assailants and ended up being killed for $120
and a gold necklace, according to police.
"For
it to be someone that they're familiar with, someone that they knew,
makes the pain even greater," said Donald Carlton, the couple's nephew.
Terry
Ballard, 26, of Philadelphia, and Justen Smith, 19, of Glen Campbell,
were charged with murder, robbery and related offenses. It wasn't clear
if they had attorneys.
The
Perrys' bodies were found early Thursday by one of their daughters in
the stairwell of their rowhouse in the city's Strawberry Mansion
section. They had abrasions on their faces and necks, Homicide Capt.
James Clark said.
Police
believe the couple let in the men sometime Wednesday to do odd jobs.
When one suspect allegedly tried to take an envelope of cash he found in
the kitchen, 66-year-old Gladys Perry confronted him, Clark said. He
attacked and choked her to death, and her 79-year-old husband was
strangled and smothered with a pillow while trying to save her,
according to police.
Neighbors later told investigators they had
seen Ballard and another man in the victims' backyard that day. Officers
soon found the suspects and brought them in for questioning."They both admitted to their involvement in this brutal and senseless double murder," Clark said.
Ballard,
whose grandmother is a close friend of the Perrys, had recently moved
back to the neighborhood after several years away, Clark said. He didn't
say how Ballard and Smith, whose hometown is in western Pennsylvania,
knew each other.
Rufus Perry
had worked for the city Streets Department, where nephew Donald Carlton
now serves as deputy commissioner. Gladys, who is listed in public
records as Algladis, had worked as a nurse at a local hospital.
The
couple kept to themselves but were the rocks of their family — always
the first to offer financial or emotional support, said Carlton. He
thanked neighbors for helping with the investigation despite the city's
pervasive no-snitching culture.
"Too
often in these cases, people don't speak, they don't want to get
involved," Carlton said. The fact that people came forward is "a
testament to who my aunt and uncle were."
Funeral arrangements were not yet complete, he said.
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