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The timing "struck many of us as odd, as peculiar," the district attorney said. She said she suggested the coroner investigate "so we could hopefully put to bed any rumors and speculation." Archdiocese spokeswoman Donna Farrell said a representative of the coroner's office had released the cardinal's body to a funeral home shortly after his death. The day after Bevilacqua died, Farrell said, the coroner's office contacted the funeral home and asked for the body. "It is our understanding that someone who is a public figure -- and certainly Cardinal Bevilacqua was a public figure
-- that it's not out of the question that tests would be done just so that the record is completely clear," she said. "We understand that law enforcement and civil agencies have their role and responsibilities. We do hope that this can be concluded quickly." One churchgoer Friday at Philadelphia's Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul said there was nothing surprising to her about the timing of Bevilacqua's death. "The man was frail, and he was under stress, and they're surprised?" Patricia Janoski said. "He was ill for a long time, and he probably just gave up."
[Associated
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