An upstate New York delivery driver is now facing serious legal trouble after a viral video she recorded during a shift led to a grand jury indictment. Olivia Henderson, 23, appeared in Oswego County Court on Friday to face felony charges related to an incident that occurred on October 12, 2025. The situation started when Henderson recorded a man who was asleep on his couch inside his own home and subsequently shared the footage on TikTok.
According to New York Post, the video, which showed the man without his pants, quickly gained massive attention on the platform and reached nearly 30 million views before it was eventually taken down. Henderson initially claimed that she was the victim of sexual harassment during her delivery route.
In her original TikTok video, she told her followers, “My customer requested that my order be left at their front door, and when I arrived at their house, their front door was wide open, and they were within eyesight of the front door, laying on the couch, indecently exposed to me.” She even went as far as filing a police report based on these claims, suggesting she had been deliberately lured by the individual.
I bet she wishes she just left the food and walked away now
Investigators took a different view of the events after looking into the details. They determined that the man was actually passed out drunk inside his own house and had never interacted with Henderson at all. The legal fallout has been significant for the 23-year-old. She is now facing one count of unlawful surveillance in the second degree and one count of dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image in the first degree.
Court documents specifically accuse Henderson of “degrading” the victim by recording “intimate parts of such person at a place and time when such person has a reasonable expectation of privacy, without such person’s knowledge or consent.” During her appearance in Oswego County Court on Friday, Henderson pleaded not guilty through her attorney. She was released without bail as the case proceeds, and she is expected back in court in June.
It is worth noting that this isn’t the first time Henderson has been in court for this matter. She first appeared in Oswego City Court in December 2025 following her arrest. During the more recent proceedings, Oswego County Judge Armen Nazarian did not allow cameras inside the courtroom. When reporters attempted to get a comment from her outside the courthouse, Henderson declined to speak.
If she is convicted on these charges, the potential consequences are quite severe, as she could face up to eight years in prison. The company she worked for, DoorDash, took immediate action once the situation came to light. They deactivated her account, citing a clear breach of their internal rules. A representative for the company stated, “Posting a video of a customer in their home, and disclosing their personal details publicly, is a clear violation of our policies.”
The company further clarified that this was the only reason her account was deactivated while they conducted their own investigation into the incident. Before the charges were filed, Henderson had also publicly accused the delivery service of deactivating her account for no reason, but the company maintained that they support workers reporting legitimate safety concerns while still enforcing privacy protections for customers.
The entire situation serves as a stark reminder of the risks associated with filming and posting content from inside private residences. Even when someone feels they have been wronged, taking matters into one’s own hands by broadcasting the private moments of others on social media can lead to life-altering legal outcomes. The man featured in the video is currently in contact with authorities as the case moves forward.
With a court date set for June, the legal system will ultimately decide how these actions are classified under the law.
Published: May 4, 2026 05:00 pm