Philly House Horror? FBI Finds Drum

FBI and SWAT team gathered near vehicle.

A Philadelphia home packed with fake federal IDs, guns, and chemicals has put a repeat offender back in the spotlight.

Quick Take

  • Police arrested Eugene Horsch on June 19 after finding guns, fake DEA credentials, drugs, and altered serial numbers.
  • A later search of his Olney home turned up more than 120 pieces of ballistic evidence, chemicals, and a 55-gallon drum tied to water lines.
  • Federal agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) are helping test the chemicals and assess any public safety risk.
  • Police say no bodies were found, despite viral rumors and family claims tied to a missing woman.

Arrest That Set Off the Probe

Philadelphia police say a park ranger helped trigger the case after spotting a disturbance in a parked car on Market Street. Officers then arrested Eugene Horsch and found two firearms with obliterated serial numbers, fake DEA credentials, and other evidence that led to charges for possession, possession with intent to deliver, and multiple weapons violations.[6] Reporters said Horsch also had a long criminal history, including prior violent charges.

That arrest led police to a home on West Chew Avenue in Olney, where the scene quickly grew more serious. Officers said they found another gun, ammunition, drugs, chemicals in bottles, and a 55-gallon drum linked to water lines.[1][2] FOX 29 also reported more than 120 pieces of ballistic evidence and computers that are still being examined.[2] Police described the setup as highly unusual and said federal experts were brought in to help sort it out.

Chemicals, Evidence, and Open Questions

Investigators have not said exactly what the chemicals are or what they were meant for. FOX 29 reported that FBI experts from Quantico are analyzing the materials, while police said the substances are being guarded until they can be safely removed.[2] That caution matters. Without a confirmed lab result, claims that the home was an explosive site or drug factory remain unproven, even if the stash looked alarming to officers on scene.

Police also pushed back hard on online rumors that bodies were found inside the house. Reporters on the scene said officers saw no apparent bodies, and police repeated that message to local outlets.[1][2] That denial does not answer every question, but it does cut down the noise. For now, the known facts point to a weapons-and-drugs case with a strange chemical component, not the horror story social media tried to build.

Fake ID, Missing Person Claims, and Public Concern

Another strange detail came from a woman who was with Horsch when police intervened. Reporters said she carried an ID in the name of a missing woman, which fueled speculation about a possible link to an old disappearance.[1][2] But police have not confirmed any direct connection between Horsch and that missing person. That leaves the claim in the realm of suspicion, not proof.

Horsch’s lawyer offered a different explanation, saying the chemicals belonged to Horsch’s deceased father, Ray Hirsch.[1] That claim may matter later, but it does not erase what police say they found during the search or what Horsch allegedly carried at arrest. For readers who are tired of soft policing and endless excuses, the core issue is simple: a convicted felon was allegedly armed, carrying fake federal credentials, and tied to a house full of suspicious material while federal agents now sort out the rest.

Sources:

[1] Web – FBI Investigating Philly Home Packed With Chemicals, Guns, Fake DEA …

[2] Web – FBI searching home after man arrested with fake IDs, chemicals …

[6] YouTube – FBI on large scale-drug bust in Philadelphia