None — From a serial killer's artwork to jailhouse letters from Elisa Baker, the sale of memorabilia from high-profile murder cases is a growing business.
But families of local murder victims are outraged, and want it to stop.
The sites have names like Murder Auction and Serial Killers Ink. Enter a name from any highly publicized case and users will most likely find something for sale online.
Dee Sumpter still wears a photo of her only daughter, Shauna.
"It just makes me feel physically closer to her," she said.
Her daughter was one of 10 women killed by Charlotte strangler Henry Wallace in the early 1990s. A sketch of his hands is for sale online for $100.
"The way he killed Shauna was a personal killing. It was with his hands. And the unmitigated gall of him to sell a photo or an artist rendering of such -- I don't have words," Sumpter said.
Thank you for participating in this informal survey. Would you buy memorabilia from a convicted killer? Would you buy memorabilia from a convicted killer? Yes. No.
Eric Gein doesn't have Henry Wallace's hand print, but he did show Channel 9 a letter he just received from the death row inmate. Gein is the founder of Serial Killers Ink and operates the Murderabilia site out of his home in Jacksonville, Fla.
He hopes to soon start selling items from Wallace on his website.
"I've been doing this so long it is not weird to me. This is a business. This right here is money to me. It's about profit," Gein said.
Selling this 'murderabilia' is Gein's full-time job. He made more than $600 by selling letters from Elisa Baker who was just convicted of killing her stepdaughter, Zahra.
But he also sells artwork from serial killers -- even bags of dirt from the location where one mass murderer buried his victims.
Gein said the entire process starts with a letter. He writes to the convicted killer and begins a relationship, hoping the killer responds.
"I enjoy what I do. I am desensitized to their crimes. When I write these guys, I do factor in their crimes. That's one of the ways I gauge the prices. Of course the higher the kills, the more notorious they are, the higher the price," Gein said.
However, the murder memorabilia business rubs some people the wrong way.
"You kind of wonder what's wrong with some folks," said state Sen. Bob Rucho.
Rucho was shocked when Channel 9 showed him what could be purchased on these websites.
Because the killers don't profit directly from the sales, it is legal for a third party to sell the items online, like a letter Gein received from Olympic Park bomber Eric Rudolph.
While Rucho does not want to infringe on a person's First Amendment rights, he is willing to push for new legislation that would keep serial killers in check.
"They continue to have their notoriety expanded. That's the last thing we want to do to these murderers. We should isolate them, put them in a jail, and never let them come back out," Rucho said.
But Gein said an effort to shut down his business violates his civil liberties.
"The whole anti-murderabilia -- make murderabilia illegal law is an anti-civil liberties bill. Who are they to tell me what I can and can't sell as long as it is legal?" Gein asked.
Sumpter still has not looked at the hand sketch from her daughter's killer, but she is ready to fight to keep others from profiting from it.
"Have a conscience; have a heart; have a mind. Legislatively, I know there has to be something that can be done to stop this," Sumpter said.
Gein said his customers come from the U.S. and Europe. Some are collectors of the macabre. Others are members of the military and some are university professors, Gein said.