
Gang Pressure and Betrayal: The Murder of Officer Michael Beverly
How an 18-year-old mentee killed the Philadelphia-area cop who tried to save him from gang life
Quick Facts
On October 16, 2001, Corporal Michael Douglas Beverly of the Chester Police Department was gunned down in the Highland Gardens neighborhood of Chester, Pennsylvania. An 11-year veteran and respected officer, Beverly was struck multiple times in the face and chest while standing near his unmarked police car, his service weapon still holstered and his keys still in hand. The killing bore the hallmarks of a calculated execution.
What made this murder particularly tragic was the relationship between Beverly and his killer. The corporal had been actively mentoring Maurice Day, an 18-year-old who was being recruited into the Boyle Street Boys, a gang that controlled the Highland Gardens area and was deeply involved in drug and gun trafficking. Day's mother, Gloria Adams, was a close friend of Beverly and had specifically asked the officer to help keep her son away from gang life.
Investigators initially suspected the Boyle Street Boys gang itself. For nearly ten months, detectives interviewed neighborhood residents and issued subpoenas to encourage cooperation. A breakthrough came when an informant provided information leading to the discovery of a .44 magnum revolver hidden in an abandoned building. Ballistics testing confirmed it was the murder weapon. However, the gun yielded no fingerprints or DNA evidence.
When police first focused on Maurice Day, he denied any involvement. His girlfriend confirmed his alibi that he had been with her the night of the shooting, and he was initially cleared as a suspect. But the investigation took a critical turn when witnesses came forward with damning testimony.
A female witness testified that she had seen the suspect at the scene of the murder. More significantly, a gang member later testified that Maurice Day had admitted to killing Beverly. Day's own cousin, who was not involved in gang activity, also provided incriminating testimony, claiming that Day had told him directly: "He told me he killed the cop – he shot him."


