SPRINGFIELD -- A newly released list of items police took from Stewart Weldon's Page Boulevard home includes rosary beads, dozens of items of adult and children's clothing, lawn lime, iodine and turkey bones.

But Weldon's attorney, Brian Murphy, joined prosecutors Tuesday in arguing against releasing the full list of evidence contained in a detective's search warrant return, telling a Springfield District Court judge that some of the items are "quite sensational."

Releasing information about those items, Murphy said, might cause public speculation about how three women whose bodies were found at Weldon's 1333 Page Blvd. home died.

The Republican / MassLive and The Boston Globe filed motions in June seeking to lift or modify an impoundment order on search warrant materials from the investigation at the home, and police documents in one of two kidnapping cases against Weldon.

The Hampden district attorney's office previously released a version of the 13-page list with every item redacted.

But at a hearing Tuesday on the news organizations' requests, Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Dunphy Farris told Judge John Payne she went over the list and decided some items no longer need to be impounded.

The partially unredacted list, given to lawyers for The Republican / Masslive and The Boston Globe, offers the first specific information on 120 of the items taken from the home.

About 75 items remain completely blacked out.

Item 196 on the list is "Three (3) sets of human remains," with additional information redacted.

Police were called to the Page Boulevard home May 30, and discovered the remains of Kayla Escalante, 27, of Ludlow, and Springfield residents Ernestine Ryans, 47, and 34-year-old America Canales Lyden. The state medical examiner's office has not issued reports on when or how they died.

Weldon, 40, who is in custody on $2 million bail after pleading not guilty in two kidnapping cases, has not been charged in connection with the women's deaths.

Murphy and Dunphy Farris asked Payne Tuesday to extend the impoundment order on the materials.

Dunphy Farris said she and Assistant District Attorney Max Bennett reviewed the list prior to the hearing, and determined which items could be made public.

Murphy said a number of the items seized from the home would not be admissable at trial, because they are not relevant or for other reasons.

Payne heard from both sides and said he would review submitted filings and make decide what should remain impounded. He said he was concerned with the length of time -- about two months -- the impoundment has stood.

The items prosecutors have now publicly disclosed show the breadth of material police cataloged during the weeklong search of the property, which included a sweep of the yard with ground-penetrating radar.

Much of the evidence listed includes mundane household items and clothing -- two empty bleach bottles, picture frames, Air Jordan sneakers, a pink child's shirt and a yellow child's shirt, gray long johns, a bent metal butter knife, a broken watch. There were a number of items from a kitchen trash can, including a bottle of baby shampoo and a makeup container.

A black latex glove found hanging from a branch in the yard, was among other items listed, as well as lawn lime, a box of trash bags, a bent metal butter knife and a broken watch.

Police also seized Weldon's Mastercard, a "black wallet with ID (Stewart Weldon)," a Medicare health insurance card and various store and bank receipts, according to the document.

Paperwork bearing a name that is redacted was taken from a trash container under a carport at the home.

Some of the items -- such as black rosary beads, a "black sports bra and chap stick," a cigarette butt and a used Band-Aid -- are accompanied by descriptions that remain redacted.

Over the course of the week, investigators dug up several sections of the yard. One of the items listed is: "turkey bones, recovered from dig at 1333 page Blvd."

Elizabeth Zuckerman, representing The Republican / Masslive, said the prosecution's stated reason for the impoundment is too general and does not explain why the material shouldn't be released.

Dunphy Farris argued for continued impoundment of sections of a police report in one of the kidnapping cases. She said information about conversations with witnesses, and their relationship to Weldon, must remain private to protect the witnesses.

Murphy said even if the material remains impounded, Weldon will struggle in a "Herculean task" to receive a fair trial.