Accused business owners claim they were “unaware” that selling human body parts online was against the law.

 

Capt. Sherif El-Shami of the Orange City Police Department said that this was something he had never seen “in the 17 years that.

I’ve worked for this agency.” Yes, the store where you could sell a used t-shirt or a video game, but the proprietors chose to sell body parts instead.

According to the affidavit, the business was reportedly selling two pieces of human skull for $90, while Schopper was selling a human rib and a human spine for $35 each.

A half human skull was posted online for $600, while a single human collarbone and scapula were offered for the same amount.

Naturally, authorities were eager to talk to the company owners about their sales endeavors after uncovering the discovery. The company’s website describes its business model as follows:

“Get to know the evil ladies that created Wonderland. A mother-daughter duo that takes great pleasure in the craziness of the dark and macabre, the odd and weird.

 

Following her death at the age of 39, Michelle Trachtenberg’s official cause of death was disclosed.

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