A 52-year-old Florida female was lately apprehended after she purposefully dealt human bones online, cops claim.
Kymberlee Anne Schopper of Deltona was billed with trading in human cells, according to the Orange City Police Department.
Schopper was launched Friday from the Volusia County Jail on $7,500 bond.

Kymberlee Schopper, 52, is billed with trading human cells. (Volusia County Jail )
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Police obtained a recordDec 21, 2023, concerning a regional organization offering human bones on Facebook Marketplace, 35 Orlando reported.
Officers were sent out pictures from business’s Facebook web page, which purportedly promoted the troubling things.
The Orange City organization, “Wicked Wonderland,” was offering on its internet site 2 human heads for $90, a human clavicle and scapula for $90, a human rib for $35, human vertebrae for $35 and a partial human head for $600, according to authorities.

Selling human remains is unlawful in Florida. ( iStock)
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Police took the human stays as proof and sent them for screening by a clinical supervisor, 35 Orlando reported.
When inquired about the items, a store proprietor informed authorities the store marketed human bones for many years and did not understand it was unlawful in Florida, according to the record.
“She confirmed that the store had multiple human bone fragments, all purchased from private sellers, and mentioned she has documentation for these transactions but could not provide it at that moment,” according to an apprehension sworn statement. “She described the bones as genuine human remains and delicate in nature.”
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Kymberlee Anne Schopper purportedly dealt human bones on Facebook Marketplace. (Reuters)
However, Schopper, an additional among the store’s proprietors, informed cops the bones were “educational models.”
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Models can be marketed lawfully in Florida, according to state regulation.
Experts located the cranium and the head piece were most likely historical finds, some being greater than 100 years of ages and others being greater than 500 years of ages, 35 reported.