A 52-year-old Florida woman was recently arrested after she intentionally bought and sold human bones online, police say.
According to the Orange City Police Department, Kimberly Ann Shopper of Deltona has been accused of dealing with human organisations.
Schopper was released from Volusia County Jail on a $7,500 bond on Friday.
Kymberlee Schopper, 52, is being charged with dealing with human organisations. (Vorcia County Jail)
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Police received a report on December 21, 2023 about local businesses selling human bones on the Facebook market. Fox 35 Orlando It has been reported.
The executive was reportedly sent images from the business's Facebook page to promote the ominous item.
Authorities say Wicked Wonderland, an Orange City business, sold $90, for $35 for human collarbone and scapula, human rib, human rib, human vertebrae, and partial human skull for $600.

It is illegal to sell human remains in Florida. (istock)
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Police stolen the human body as evidence and submitted it for inspection by an inspector. Fox 35 Orlando It has been reported.
When asked about the product, the store owner told authorities that they had sold human bones for many years to authorities and had no idea they were illegal in Florida, according to the report.
“She said that the store had fragments of all human bones, all purchased from private sellers, and that there were documents for these transactions but they were unable to provide it at that moment,” according to the arrest affidavit. “She described the bones as genuine human remains and delicate in nature.”
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Kymberlee Anne Schopper is said to have bought and sold human bones on the Facebook market. (Reuters)
But another shop owner, Shopper, told police that bones are a “educational model.”
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According to state law, models can be legally sold in Florida.
Experts have discovered that skulls and skull fragments are likely archaeological finds. Some are more than 100 years old, while others are more than 500 years old, Fox 35 reported.
