DoorDash driver arrested after filming and accusing customer of harrassment during delivery
Olivia Henderson faces two felony counts after posting a video of an unclothed customer on TikTok

Olivia Henderson has been arrested on two felony charges of unlawful surveillance and dissemination of surveillance images after she recorded a customer who was passed out with his trousers down inside his home during a food delivery and later posted the footage on TikTok.
DoorDash delivery girl has been arrested on 2 felony charges after recording a man passed out with his pants down in his home and posting it on TikTok during a food delivery.
— FearBuck (@FearedBuck) November 16, 2025
She is being charged with unlawful surveillance and dissemination of surveillance images https://t.co/rMntkpIxFr pic.twitter.com/IfEQ3fAcSf
The charges follow an incident on October 12, 2025, which initially gained attention after Henderson claimed her DoorDash account had been deactivated shortly after she reported what she described as sexual harassment.
In her TikTok posts, Henderson said, “A man named Austin orders DoorDash selects the option to have order left at door sees his door dasher (me) has a female name ‘falls asleep on the couch’ with his pants and underwear to his ankles and his front door wide open in 59°F so this is what I see when I have to leave the order.”
A DoorDash delivery driver is going viral after she was fired from the company after claiming she was s*xually assaulted while delivering food to a customer who was passed out with his pants down and the door wide open pic.twitter.com/GKFW7HEjiL
— FearBuck (@FearedBuck) October 20, 2025
She also claimed, “DoorDash punished me for exposing my assaulter, and TikTok is currently punishing me… This is the only justice I’m getting because I also reported this to the police, and the police are doing nothing.”
Online reaction was divided, with some users supporting her concerns for driver safety and others arguing that recording inside a customer’s home breached clear delivery protocols.
DoorDash later confirmed her account had been deactivated for violating its Invasion of Privacy policy, stating, “Posting a video of a customer in their home, and disclosing their personal details publicly, is a clear violation of our policies.”
A police report filed two days after the delivery documented Henderson’s initial call, noting she wished to prevent similar situations for other drivers.
The attending officer concluded no offence had been committed by the customer, explaining that he had been inside his own home with no public view. The case was closed at the time, but Henderson now faces felony proceedings for recording and publishing the footage.


















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