
Valuetainment “330 Gallons Of Sulfuric Acid” - Epstein’s WEIRD Purchase REVEALED In Epstein Files Release
Feb 17, 2026
Vincent 'Vinny' Oshana, a panel contributor who verifies dates and documents, and Rob, a regular commentator who reacts and probes facts, unpack explosive Epstein file revelations. They examine a 330-gallon sulfuric acid claim, plausible civilian uses versus criminal theories. They parse resurfaced emails about pandemics, alleged burials, dental office reports, and ties to high-profile figures and institutions.
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Large Acid Order Matches Renewed Scrutiny
- Documents show Epstein entities ordered six 55-gallon drums (330 gallons) of sulfuric acid on December 6, 2018. There is no direct proof in the files that the order was for destroying evidence.
Don't Assume Motive From A Purchase
- Consider benign industrial uses before assuming criminal intent when large chemical purchases appear in records. Investigators and listeners should avoid jumping from purchase to motive without corroborating evidence.
Historical Acid Murders Cited As Precedent
- Patrick and panelists speculate about sinister uses, referencing historical acid-dissolution murders like John George Haig and cases in France and the UK. They link those precedents to why a large acid order raises alarm and drives their conjecture about silencing victims.
