(CNN) Internet trolls hijacked George Zimmerman's auction for the gun used to kill Trayvon Martin , jacking up the price to $65 million for a time early Friday with a series of likely prank bids ridiculing the former neighborhood watch volunteer.

By Saturday, the page appeared to have been taken down.

The top bidder for a time was one "Racist McShootface," although other bids from a "Tamir Rice" -- the name of a Cleveland child killed by police last year -- also appear in the list of offers for the weapon Zimmerman used in his 2012 Sanford, Florida, confrontation with 17-year-old Martin

The "Racist McShootface" bids were deleted Friday morning from the United Gun Group auction site, but the trolling prompted one apparently serious bidder to call the trolls "losers" and express hope that their "children get murdered."

"Obviously the jury didn't think it was murder," the bidder identified as Brez Morrell posted of Zimmerman's 2013 acquittal. "He did nothing wrong."

Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings George Zimmerman said this week he intended to auction the gun he used to kill Florida teenager Trayvon Martin in 2012. It is not unheard of for evidence in high-profile cases to be sold at auction or otherwise appear in public. Here is a look at what has happened to pieces of evidence in other well-publicized deaths. Hide Caption 1 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings This is the Volkswagen Beetle police say serial killer Ted Bundy used with some of his victims in the 1970s. Bundy, who confessed to killing more than 30 women and girls, was executed in Florida in 1989 after being convicted of killing three people there. The vehicle was in Washington at the National Museum of Crime and Punishment before the museum closed last year. Hide Caption 2 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings During the sniper-style shootings that took place in the Washington area in 2002, this tarot card was left for police outside a middle school in Maryland's Prince George's County. By the time John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo were arrested, 10 people were killed and three others were injured. Muhammed was executed and Malvo was sentenced to life in prison. The card is on display at the Newseum in Washington, on loan from the National Law Enforcement Museum. Hide Caption 3 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings Jack Ruby shocked the world when he shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald shortly after Oswald was accused of assassinating President John F. Kennedy in 1963. The gun used to kill Oswald, a Colt Cobra, was sold at auction in 1991 by Ruby's brother. It was bought for a reported $220,000 by Florida businessman Anthony Pugliese III. Pugliese himself put it up for auction in 2008, but he kept it after no bid met his reserve price, the Guernsey's auction house said. Hide Caption 4 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings Blood-stained gloves were among the evidence in the 1995 murder trial of O.J. Simpson. After the monthslong trial -- in which the defendant famously tried on the gloves -- he was acquitted in the deaths of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Police say the case still is open, and the gloves and other evidence reportedly still are in authorities' possession. Hide Caption 5 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, the notorious couple who murdered and robbed their way to infamy in the 1930s, were gunned down by police in Louisiana in 1934. A Colt .38 snub-nosed revolver was found taped to Parker's inner thigh, and a Colt .45 was found on Barrow's waistband. In 2012, Parker's weapon was sold at auction for $264,000, and the other sold for $240,000. Hide Caption 6 of 7 Photos: Evidence from high-profile killings The Newseum in Washington holds a 10-by-12-foot cabin that "Unabomber" Ted Kaczynski lived in for years. Hide Caption 7 of 7

The $65 million bid was later replaced by one from a user named Craig Bryant. It was unclear if that bid was serious.

Zimmerman -- seen by some as a national pariah and by others as a hero -- announced plans to sell the Kel-Tec PF-9 weapon on Wednesday. The 9mm pistol carries a suggested price of $356.36 on the manufacturer's website.

On Friday afternoon, United Gun Group posted a statement to Twitter expressing condolences to Martin's family, but appearing to support the continuation of Zimmerman's auction.

"Unless the law has been violated, it is the intention of United Gun Group to allow its members to use any of the available features," the statement read.

But by Saturday morning, the auction appeared to have been discontinued. "This auction has been deleted," read a message on the page where the sale had been posted.

It wasn't immediately clear why the auction had been removed. But United Gun Group founder Todd Underwood said Friday that if it was taken down before the end of its full four-day period, it would have been by the seller -- in this case, Zimmerman, or someone acting on his behalf.

Fatal encounter

On February 26, 2012, Zimmerman called 911 to report a "suspicious person" in his neighborhood. Police told him not to get out of the car or approach Martin, but he disregarded the instructions and a confrontation ensued.

Zimmerman said Martin attacked him and he shot the unarmed teenager in self-defense. The case shined a spotlight on Florida laws allowing the use of deadly force and on issues of race.

A jury acquitted him of second-degree murder on July 13, 2013.

In his post introducing the auction, Zimmerman said he was "honored and humbled to announce the sale of an American Firearm Icon."

He said some of the proceeds would be used to fight Black Lives Matter violence against police, and to "ensure the demise of (State's Attorney) Angela Correy's persecution career and Hillary Clinton's anti-firearm rhetoric."

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First auction pulled

Zimmerman had first tried to sell the pistol through a site called GunBroker, but the website sent out a message Thursday afternoon saying it had rejected the idea.

"Our site rules state that we reserve the right to reject listings at our sole discretion, and have done so with the Zimmerman listing," a GunBroker statement said. "We want no part in the listing on our web site or in any of the publicity it is receiving."

Zimmerman told CNN he moved the auction to another website, giving a different reason than GunBroker did.

"Unfortunately, (the site) was not prepared for the traffic and publicity surrounding the auction of my firearm," Zimmerman said in a text. "It has now been placed with another auction house."

That site, United Gun Group, initially put out a statement Thursday night saying the gun would not be sold on its site. But on Friday, Underwood, the site's founder, said the site is simply a platform through which people can sell their products, and that he'd leave it up to Zimmerman as to whether the auction would continue.

The site tweeted Thursday night to say it does not profit from auctions and was not responsible for auctions on its site.

"I'm a free American"

Zimmerman announced his plan to auction the weapon in an interview Wednesday with WOFL-TV in Orlando, Florida.

"I recently received it back from the Department of Justice," he said. "They took it after my trial, after I was exonerated."

Zimmerman told the station he has had death threats since he put the gun up for sale.

"What I've decided to do is not cower," he said. "I'm a free American. I can do what I want with my possessions."

In posting the weapon for auction, Zimmerman described the weapon as a "piece of American History."

"The firearm for sale is the firearm that was used to defend my life and end the brutal attack from Trayvon Martin on 2/26/2012," Zimmerman apparently wrote in the posts.

"The pistol currently has the case number written on it in silver permanent marker," he wrote.

Zimmerman said museums such as the Smithsonian Institution have "expressed interest in owning and displaying the firearm."

But the Washington-based Smithsonian denied it has any interest in the weapon.

"We have never expressed interest in collecting George Zimmerman's firearm, and have no plans to ever collect or display it in any museums," it said in a statement.

Martin's family: Focus is on ending gun violence

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Martin's family declined to comment on the purported sale of the gun, saying the Trayvon Martin Foundation is focused on ending gun violence in the United States.

Family attorney Benjamin Crump told CNN's "New Day" Friday that Zimmerman "keeps appearing to reopen the wounds again and again."

"It's like he is shooting and killing Trayvon all over again four years later with this attempt to auction off this gun like it's some kind of trophy," Crump said. "I mean, it's offensive, it's outrageous and it's insulting."

The gun sale is not Zimmerman's first effort at auction.