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Leon Trotsky murder weapon resurfaces in Mexico MEXICO CITY (AP)  One of history's most infamous murder weapons, the icepick police believe was used to kill Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky, has resurfaced just weeks before the 65th anniversary of his assassination. A dispute between this icepick's owner and Leon Trotsky's descendants have delayed tests that could prove it was used to kill Trotsky. By Dario Lopez-Mills, AP Tests to authenticate the weapon have been delayed by a dispute between the current owner, who may hope to sell it, and Trotsky's grandson, who wants it for his museum — evidence of the ongoing struggle between socialist ideals and capitalism. The icepick is in the hands of Ana Alicia Salas, whose father apparently removed it from an evidence room while serving as a secret police commander in the 1940s. She is considering selling the foot-long mountaineer's icepick, but hasn't decided on a price. Trotsky's grandson, who keeps the revolutionary flame alive by maintaining Trotsky's home in Mexico City as a museum, wants the icepick for his display. Trotsky helped lead the 1917 Russian Revolution, but split with Josef Stalin and fled to Mexico in 1937, accusing Stalin of betraying the revolution. Stalin is widely believed to have arranged Trotsky's Aug. 20, 1940, murder, in which a man sneaked up behind Trotsky and sank the icepick into his skull. The murder weapon has become infamous, inspiring an indie rock band "Trotsky Icepick," whose songs included "A Little Push At The Top Of The Stairs." The weapon in Salas' possession has faint, reddish-brown stains. But there's only one sure way to prove the stains are Trotsky's blood, and Esteban Volkov, Trotsky's grandson, holds the key: his DNA. "Looking at it objectively, this is a piece of history," Volkov said in an interview at the home in the leafy Mexico City district of Coyoacan where Trotsky was killed. "It should be in the museum." Volkov, 79, has offered a sample of his DNA for comparison to whatever material can be recovered from the pick, but only if Salas donates the artifact to his museum. "If it is for commercial purposes, I refuse to participate in this kind of thing," said Volkov, who charges about $1 admission to the museum. Salas, 50, refuses to consider donating the icepick. "Sometimes people don't value things that are given away," she told AP. In a country where police misconduct is legendary, Salas is quick to paint her father, Alfredo, as a model secret service agent. She said her father, who retired in 1965 and died in 1985, had been granted permission by superiors to keep the icepick for a "museum of criminology." She says her father put the icepick with his personal possessions after someone tried to steal it from a display. And while she has said previously that she is seeking "some financial benefit" in exchange for the pick, Salas now hedges when asked if she will sell. "I think this instrument is valuable. It is a piece of world history," Salas said, displaying the icepick, wrapped in flannel and kept in an old cardboard box labeled "Kenmore Electric Heating Pad." Asked what the icepick is worth, Salas says: "I don't know, because I don't know who's interested in it." For Volkov, the dispute echoes his ancestor's battle. "Marxism is still valid, and present," he acknowledged with a chuckle, "though we do live in a market economy." Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.