A 52 -year -old Florida woman was recently arrested after knowingly purchased and sold online human bones, police said.
According to the Orange City police service, Kymberlee Anne Schopper of Deltona has been accused of trade in human fabric.
Schopper was released from the County of Volusia on Friday with a deposit of $ 7,500.
Kymberlee Schopper, 52, is responsible for exchanging human fabric. (County prison of Volusia)
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Police received a report on December 21, 2023, about a local company selling human bones on Facebook Marketplace, Fox 35 Orlando reported.
The agents received images from the company’s Facebook page, which would have announced the worrying items.
Orange City’s company Wicked Wonderland sold two human skulls on its website for $ 90, a human collarbone and an ordeal for $ 35, a human hill, human vertebrae for $ 35 and a partial human skull for $ 600, according to the authorities.

Selling human remains is illegal in Florida. (istock)
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Police took human leftovers as proof and submitted them to test by a medical examiner, Fox 35 Orlando reported.
Asked about the products, an owner of a store told the authorities that the store had 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 several fragments of human bones, all bought from private sellers, and mentioned that it had documentation for these transactions but could not provide it at this time,” according to an arrest affidavit. “She described bones as real human remains and of a delicate nature.”
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Kymberlee Anne Schopper would have bought and sold human bones on Facebook Marketplace. (Reuters)
However, Schopper, another of the owners of the store, told the police that bones were “educational models”.
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The models can be sold legally in Florida, according to state law.
The experts found that the skull and the fragment of the skull were probably archaeological discoveries, some over 100 years old and others over 500 years old, Fox 35 reported.