But Marsh said there's a better legal case to bury the body in Cambridge because, in practice, where a person lived has been the key factor in determining the place of burial.
In the ruling, Weeks found that not only did prosecutors across the state intentionally use the race of a potential juror as a significant factor in decisions to exercise preemptory challenges -- the practice of striking somebody from a jury without explanation, but that the practice occurred in Robinson's case.