Two women inspecting a Warrington Township property on Thursday to possibly purchase it made a grisly discovery. Inside a white chest freezer located in an outbuilding, under a blanket, they found several black trash bags.

They contained human skeletal remains.

In search warrants, Pennsylvania State Police say they are investigating a criminal homicide.

The warrants provide details about the bones discovery and target the foreclosed property in the first block of Kralltown Road and also a home in York Haven.

Read:Sword, machetes, knife found on York County property where bones found in bags

After the remains were found, police tracked down a relative to the suspected victim to her current home in York Haven, according to the warrant.

Relative interviewed

In an interview, the relative told police she knew exactly where the freezer was located on the property and that she had been receiving money from the victim to care for her while she lived there.

More:Body found on northern York County property

"It is believed that (the relative) continued to receive financial compensation from (the victim) post death," the warrant states, and that she "failed to acknowledge (the victim's) death and believed she may still be alive at 112 years of age."

During a search on Friday at the relative's York Haven home, police seized a marijuana bong, a metal marijuana grinder, a glasses case with various paraphernalia inside, a plastic bag containing marijuana, a Crown Royal bag, a large metal smoking device, nunchucks and a large box with various financial documents, according to the search warrant return.

A return for items found at the property on Kralltown Road was not filed with District Judge Richard T. Thomas, who has jurisdiction in the case, Thomas' office reported Tuesday.

Further testing needed

Police and emergency personnel arrived at the property on Thursday evening, conducting a full-scale investigation.

An autopsy on the "significantly decomposed" remains, conducted Monday, did not determine the cause and manner of death, but did reveal there was no visible trauma, according to York County Coroner Pam Gay.

Gay said Monday that further forensic testing, both by a forensic pathologist and the anthropology department at Mercyhurst University in Erie, will hopefully determine cause and manner of death.

Authorities also have not publicly released the victim's name until further confirmation is made.

No charges have been filed.

How to help

If anyone has any information on the death, they are asked to call state police at 717-428-1011.