Three fake legs — one of them made to look bloody — have recently turned up near the memorial stone for a Cape Cod bodyboarder who died in a shark attack last year, and local police are digging into who put them there and why, according to a new report.

Arthur Medici, 26, of Revere, Massachusetts, was bitten by a white shark back in September while boogie boarding off Newcomb Hollow Beach in Wellfleet and succumbed to his injuries at a local hospital.

Police Chief Ronald Fisette told The Cape Cod Times that the fake limbs — which he said were placed in poor taste — have been removed, but authorities are still investigating.

“At this time we don’t have a charge,” Fisette told the outlet. “At this time I don’t have enough information.”

The beach is owned by the town — and there is currently no town policy on removal of private objects from town property, Town Administrator Daniel Hoort told the paper.

“I’m not aware of a policy other than a sense of common decency,” he said.

The first mysterious leg turned up in March, and was tossed by the town’s public works staff, according to the report.

Then a second life-size leg was found early last month bolted to the split-rail fence next to the memorial stone. The leg, carved from wood, had its thigh and knee encased in a pair of torn jeans with a lime-green ribbon tied around the ankle, with an RIP note attached, according to the report.

“It was pretty intricate,” Jay Norton, the town’s assistant public works director, told the outlet.

It was turned over to police, who are continuing to hold it.

Then, last weekend, a third, even more elaborate fake leg was discovered near the stone, Fisette told the paper. This one also was encased in jeans, but had a deep and bloody gash running along the thigh, with a substance made to look like blood dripping down the ankle, according to the report.

This leg was attached to a broken blue cooler, apparently filled with cement to stabilize two pieces of rebar shaped like a V.

The latest leg, too, was turned over to authorities.

As distasteful as they are, the appendages are not being viewed by cops as vandalization.

“It’s not destruction,” Fisette told the paper.