One that is not and never was attached to you? Can I legally own a shrunken head? Can I make my own shrunken heads? For that matter could I constuct a whole human body using parts from various cadavers and then attempt to reanimate it using electricity harnessed from a lightning bolt? Would I incur any financial/tax liability by gaining the use of electricity for free while not being connected to the grid?
As far as I know, simple possession of a human body part is not illegal, as long as you can establish you came by it legally. You can buy human skulls and bones from biological supply houses, though real ones have gotten rather pricey. I think you can also probably buy a shrunken head, but an authentic human one is going to cost thousands of dollars.
In some jurisdictions there may be some laws concerning “abuse of a corpse” or some such; but ordinary possession of legally acquired body parts should not in itself be a problem.
It seems that regularly, about every year or two, there’s a newspaper story about a horrified person finding bits of cadaver in some guy’s freezer and it turns out that the guy is a medical student who’d brought them home to study and it hadn’t occurred to him that others might freak out.
si_blakely—Those particular heads are crafted from animal hides. (Maybe not CRUELTY free, but no human life lost.)
And I’ve gone to the Bone Room myself…I can confirm that, if I had the cash, I could drive down to Berkeley, buy an armload of human skeletons, and be back in time for lunch.
But the ad says authentic shrunken human heads. I’m shocked, I tell you. Shocked
The Maori of New Zealand have made determined efforts over the 20 or so years to have mokomokai (tattooed preserved human heads) returned to maori ownership. While I agree with recovering such artifacts from private collections, I would hope that at least some can remain in museums, for research and historical purposes. And not all mokomokai are tribal history or revered ancestors. The Maori were enterprising folk who were not above tattooing and killing slaves to trade heads for guns.
It occurs to me that they may still be enterprising folk, and that they may not be above campaigning for the return of mokomokai so that they can sell them to museums for research and historical purposes.
It’s not at all clear from that story whether the illegal part was “keeping human body parts in her home.” In the case of the hand, it would seem to have been obtained illegally, so that possession itself might be illegal. If she really purchased the skulls from a medical-supply catalog as alleged then there should not be anything illegal about possessing them, barring a local ordinance that prohibits keeping body parts in a private residence or some such.
She was charged with improper disposition of human remains under state law. I don’t know what is going on with the case now, probably waiting for a court date. I tried to search for the statute but I gave up. New Jersey tries to make it as difficult as possible to find particular laws online.
Thanks. If she got the hand from a medical student as the article suggests, that no doubt would qualify. I would assume that there are regulations governing the disposition of cadavers used in medical school.
I used to teach Human Anatomy, but since it was for non-pre-meds we dissected cats instead of cadavers. But we had plenty of real human bones and other human body parts in jars around the lab.