In 1982, in Los Angeles, pathologist Melvin Weisberg, who ran several laboratories in Santa Monica, kept a large shipping container in his backyard. He was paying to ship it, but when he missed a payment, the container was repossessed and taken to a junkyard area with other crates. Upon opening the container, authorities found over 17,000 dead babies—the corpses of infants—in the crate.
The container’s repossession occurred after Weisberg’s check failed to clear; the truck was sent to reclaim the container. It was too heavy to unload from the trailer, so it remained on the trailer and was moved to another yard for unloading.
As the unloading began, workers reported severe reactions. Some workers were throwing up, and one man fell down near the container. They found it opened and discovered a mutilated human body. One worker recalled: “Close your eyes.” The experience was shocking and disturbing: “babies, you know, just all torn pieces. My hands chopped off, arms, legs, you know, just it just makes you sick to see something like that.” The account notes that some workers later reflected on what they had seen, describing it as something they would rather not witness again.
There was a legal dispute over what to do with the bodies. A court order allowed for burying the infants as a humane act, but the ACLU intervened, arguing that the remains were “just tissue” and suggesting incineration instead. The question of disposition prompted debate: “Problem for whom?” in response to the burial proposal, indicating a conflict between humanitarian burial and the ACLU’s position to treat the remains as tissue to be incinerated.
Speaker 0: This is going to be graphic butterfly, so viewer discretion advised.
Speaker 1: In 1982 in Los Angeles, there was the craziest discovery and I never heard about this until a couple days ago, bro. There was this guy named Melvin Weisberg and he was a pathologist and that's basically like they do like all the lab tests on your body and like your skin. So he was one of those guys and he ran a bunch of laboratories throughout Santa Monica. Mhmm. So this dude was like a pretty important guy.
Right? Around that time, he was paying for the shipping container that he had in his backyard. It's like this huge ass shipping container. Right? Like he was paying money every month to keep it in his backyard and he ended up missing a payment.
They ended up confiscating confiscating the crate and they took it back. Right? And when they took it back, they took it to this like junkyard or this area where they had like a bunch of the other crates. They get it. They take it to this area, bro.
And dude, you're not gonna believe what they found inside of this crate. The crack opened the crate, they looked, and there was over 17,000 dead babies What? Inside of this container, and they found this inside of LA, in this 17,017 corpses of babies, bro.
Speaker 2: Malvin Weisberg, a pathologist, owned a large storage container which he kept in his backyard. When he failed to make the final two payments, it was repossessed.
Speaker 0: We made a decision to repossess it because his check did not clear the bank. So we sent the truck out to pick up the container.
Speaker 3: And we couldn't get it off the trailer, so we had to leave it on the trailer because it was too heavy. So I was asked by Nick to have a crew go down and unload the container at the other yard. I got a radio call that, from Ron Gillette, the foreman. And he said
Speaker 0: the men were throwing up and there was something really wrong. One of
Speaker 3: them fell down and hit me right in front of my feet. And it was opened up and there it was.
Speaker 4: Close your eyes.
Speaker 3: It was a mutilated body and the more closer I looked at it, it was a human body.
Speaker 4: And when I came to work the following day, I saw myself and I couldn't believe it. And just, you know, just look at me babies, you know, just all torn pieces. My hands chopped off, arms, legs, you know, just it just makes you sick to see something like that. Well, really, it just makes you want to cry when you see something like that.
Speaker 3: I really don't want to witness it again. Not what I saw.
Speaker 5: We had the court order that would allow us to bury these infants, being a humane act. And the ACLU comes in again saying that this is just tissue. We want to incinerate them and there's no need for a burial because if you had
Speaker 4: a
Speaker 5: burial somehow that's going to create a problem. Problem for whom?
The transcript revisits the 2020 Wayfair conspiracy claim, where ordinary storage cabinets and pillows listed at astonishing prices—sometimes $8.09, sometimes more than $10,000—were allegedly named after missing girls. The implication was that human trafficking could be hidden in plain sight on a mainstream e-commerce site. Mainstream media like the BBC dismissed it as a false theory, while Wayfair claimed the naming came from algorithms, that the items were industrial, and that pricing glitches from a workaround caused items to default to $9,999 before real prices kicked in.
The narrative then ties the conspiracy to Epstein-related revelations. In 2019, a 17-year-old girl from Ohio named Samaya went missing. Days later, Wayfair lists a Samaya five-shelf storage cabinet for nearly $13,000. In 2020, 16-year-old Yuritsa from Connecticut disappears, and a Yuritsa storage cabinet appears on the site for under $14,000. In May 2020, 14-year-old Annabelle from Kansas City disappears, and an Annabelle unit appears for just under $11,000. In January 2020, 16-year-old Kyla Coleman from Cleveland goes missing, and a Kyla Cabinet is discounted to about $12,000.
The discussion notes that many dismissed the claims as a hoax at the time, but a receipt from Wayfair surfaces in The Epstein files, allegedly tying the naming pattern to Jeffrey Epstein’s network. The receipt shows a purchase on June 28, 338 for one unnamed item totaling $8,453, bought by Epstein’s assistant and shipped to his longtime girlfriend, Karina Shuliak. Five days earlier, on June 23, a girl named Joanna went missing from Columbus, Ohio, and is still unaccounted for. Screenshots circulated of a high-priced Joanna cabinet from the same WFX utility company. The same company is described as still selling identical storage units today, but at a dirt-cheap price of about $139.
The narrative emphasizes that it wasn’t limited to Wayfair; Karina’s name appears in Etsy buys as well, with Pillows priced at $9,999 and suspicious naming conventions. The speaker insists that while nothing proves trafficking, the connections are provocative and raise questions about who might be orchestrating these sales within Epstein’s circle. The question about Corina/Karina remains, noting she was a dentist and potentially connected to Epstein’s properties and assets, including the Zoro Ranch and an island, with hundreds of millions in assets transferred to her shortly before Epstein’s death. The transcript closes by urging real investigations, subpoenas, and arrests, and condemns the absence of accountability for powerful individuals.
Speaker 0: You guys remember that wild Wayfair conspiracy from back in 2020? The one where they were listing these ordinary looking storage cabinets and pillows at insane prices, like $8.09, even over $10,000. And get this, the product names matched those of missing girls, often the exact same cabinet but with different girls' names and varying sky high prices. The implication was dark. Human trafficking hidden in plain sight, right on a mainstream e commerce site.
Mainstream media, like the BBC, dismissed it as a false conspiracy theory. Wayfair clapped back, claiming they used algorithms to name products, that these were industrial sized units for commercial use, and weird pricing glitches from a workaround where items defaulted to $9,999 until the real price kicked in. Yeah, sure. But hold on, because this rabbit hole just got deeper with the Epstein files dropping bombshells that make you question everything. Let's rewind to the specifics that fueled the fire.
In 2019, a 17 year old girl from Ohio named Samaya went missing. Days later, Wayfair lists a Samaya five shelf storage cabinet for nearly $13,000 Then in 2020, 16 year old Yuritsa from Connecticut vanishes. Boom! Yuritsa storage cabinet hits the site for under $14,000 May 2020: 14 year old Annabelle from Kansas City disappears. Same deal.
Annabelle unit for just under $11,000 January 2020: 16 year old Kyla Coleman from Cleveland goes missing. Yep, Kyla Cabinet, discounted to $12,000 Everyone called it a hoax back then, but now? A receipt from Wayfair surfaces in The Epstein files, tying it straight to Jeffrey Epstein's twisted network. We all know Epstein's crew had a history with missing girls. Don't forget that creepy photo of John Bonnet Ramsey with Ghislaine Maxwell lurking in the background.
The receipt shows a purchase on June 2838, for one unnamed item totaling $8,453 bought by Epstein's assistant and shipped to his longtime girlfriend, Karina Shuliak. But here's the kicker. Five days earlier, on June 23, a girl named Joanna went missing from Columbus, Ohio. And she's still unaccounted for to this day. Back when the conspiracy was blowing up online, screenshots circulated of a high priced Joanna cabinet from the same WFX utility company.
For context, that same company is still peddling identical storage units on Wayfair today. But now they're dirt cheap at just $139 Massive price drop, Coincidence? And it wasn't just Wayfair. Karina's name pops up in the files for Etsy buys too. Remember, Etsy had its own shady listings around that time: Pillows at $9,999 with super suspicious naming conventions that screamed red flags.
None of this outright proves trafficking but come on. It makes you wonder. If this was really happening, who was orchestrating the sales to Epstein and his elite circle? Allegedly, where's Corina now? She was a dentist, which might explain those bizarre dental rooms in Epstein's properties.
Just two days before his suicide, his estate transferred everything to her the Zoro Ranch, the infamous island, hundreds of millions in assets. Does she know where all the bodies are buried? I mean that figuratively, of course. Or do I? At this point, it's not enough to just release these files and call it a day.
Somebody at Wayfair needs to pull up that order number and spill what was really shipped. We need real investigations, subpoenas, and arrests. How will we know if justice is served? When we see rich powerful men in handcuffs, perp walk to jail. Until then, this reeks of a massive cover up.