A 52 -year -old Florida woman was recently arrested after she bought and sold Human Bones online, according to the police.
Kymberlee Anne Schopper of Deltona was accused of merchant in human fabric, according to the Orange City Police Department.
Schopper was released on Friday from the Volusia County prison with a bail of $ 7,500.
Police received a report on December 21, 2023, on a local business that sells human bones in the Facebook market, Fox 35 Orlando reported.
The officers were sent images of the company’s Facebook page, which allegedly announced the disturbing items.
Orange City’s business, Wicked Wonderland, sold on its website two human skulls for $ 90, a human clavicle and a scapula for $ 90, a human rib for $ 35, human vertebrae for $ 35 and a partial human skull for $ 600, according to the authorities.
Police touched the human remains as evidence and presented them for the test of a forensic doctor, Fox 35 Orlando reported.
When asked about the products, the owner of a store told the authorities that the store sold human bones for years and did not know that it was illegal in Florida, according to the report.
“She confirmed that the store had multiple fragments of human bones, all bought from private sellers, and mentioned that it has documentation for these transactions, but could not provide it at that time,” according to a trial of the affidavit. “He described the bones as genuine and delicate human remains.”
However, Schopper, another of the owners of the store, told the police that the bones were “educational models.”
Models can be legally sold in Florida, in accordance with state law.
The experts discovered that the skull and the fragment of the skull were probably archaeological findings, some were over 100 years old and others were over 500 years, Fox 35 reported.
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