E-cigarette consumption has increased globally, partly due to its perceived role as a harm-reduction alternative to conventional cigarettes. It has been linked to various neurotoxic pathologies including stroke, cognitive dysfunction, and neurodevelopmental disorders. Acute e-liquid intoxication can lead to a fatal syndrome of respiratory failure, cardiovascular instability, acute encephalopathy, and gastrointestinal distress. We present a case of toxic encephalopathy due to e-liquid intoxication directly from an e-cigarette device. Our patient is a 59-year-old man who presented to the hospital with signs of tachycardia, tremors, paranoia, disorientation, hypervigilance, physical hostility, and aphasic mutism, was unable to provide any history, and was treated on suspicion of acute encephalopathy and possible delirium tremens. Imaging including CT brain and chest X-ray was unremarkable. Laboratory tests were significant for leukocytosis (16.4 x 10