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Body part a hand-me-down, police told
A decades-old severed hand had been passed from father to son to her, a woman says.

The Associated Press July 14, 2007
WALDOBORO — Contractors working on an old house found a human hand that police later confirmed was severed 50 to 80 years ago, but it's still unclear whose hand it was and why it was there. Painters working for Bo Jespersen, who renovates and sells old homes, discovered what appeared to be a man's hand in June. "They called me and said they'd been losing sleep over something they'd found," Jespersen said. When he saw the hand, Jespersen was struck by its size, with fingers about an inch and a half longer than his own. "It's huge," he said. "And he didn't cut his nails." The wrist portion appeared jagged, Jespersen said, as if the hand had been removed violently, and 6 to 8 inches of what appeared to be tendons were looped around it. The mysterious body part was discovered by Derek Levasseur of Clinton while he was painting what's known as the Depot Road house, which was built in 1910. During a break, Levasseur was in the garage looking at a small wood-burning stove, which Jespersen had agreed he could have. On top of the stove was a box, which Levasseur opened. At first glance at the hand, Levasseur and his brother concluded it was not real. It had a look of dried rawhide. "We thought it was a prop," he said. "I touched the fingers on it, and I thought, 'It can't be real.' " Levasseur photographed the hand with his cell phone camera and e-mailed the image to his wife, who works in Waterville at the district attorney's office. While she was looking at it on her computer, a retired Maine state trooper saw the image and said he thought it was a real hand. Levasseur called Jespersen, who contacted the woman who had owned the house. He also called the state police, who came to the house, tested ashes in the stove and interviewed the former owner. Police concluded that the hand had been ripped off 50 to 80 years ago. They also seized the hand because it's illegal to possess such a body part. The previous owner claimed she had gotten the hand from a man down the road, who is now in his 80s and remembers his father having the hand. "She had heard it was from a farming accident," Jespersen said.

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