TikTok DoorDasher Indicted for Filming Unconscious Customer

Olivia Henderson, a 23-year-old DoorDash driver from Oswego, New York, has been formally indicted by a grand jury in Oswego County following an October 2025 incident that drew widespread attention online.

On October 12, 2025, Henderson was making a Wendy’s delivery to a customer who had requested his order be left at the door. Upon arriving, she encountered the customer unconscious on his couch, partially unclothed. Rather than leaving the food and walking away, she filmed him with her phone and uploaded the footage to TikTok, where it accumulated nearly 30 million views before the platform removed it. She then re-uploaded the video before TikTok took it down a second time.

Henderson subsequently claimed the man had SA’d her, though police determined through their investigation that he had been incapacitated due to al**hol consumption and that no assault had taken place. Notably, Henderson did not go to police first. She posted to TikTok, reported to DoorDash, and only contacted police after commenters on her viral video encouraged her to do so.

DoorDash deactivated her account, stating that “posting a video of a customer in their home and disclosing personal details publicly is a clear policy violation.”

Henderson went on to portray herself as the wronged party in a series of follow-up videos: “I’m the one being punished. He’s not getting in trouble with the police. He didn’t lose his job if he has one. Like what’s going on with him? Why am I getting fired? Why are my videos getting taken down? And why am I getting strikes? Like I’m about to lose my account. I was assaulted. I’m the vic tim. I lost my job.”

She also expressed frustration over lost revenue: “They took down my video. They were going to have to pay me for my second story time because that was over a minute long. They were going to have to pay me for all those views I got.”

Henderson was arrested on November 10, 2025 and charged with two class E felonies: unlawful surveillance for recording the man without his consent, and dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image for uploading the footage online. She pled not guilty at her December 4, 2025 arraignment.

After months of the case sitting in procedural limbo between city and county court, a grand jury reviewed the evidence and determined there is sufficient cause to proceed. The charges remain exactly as originally filed, with no reductions or dismissals. Each count carries a maximum sentence of four years, meaning Henderson could face up to eight years in prison if sentenced consecutively.

Her next court appearance is scheduled for May 1, 2026. Legal observers note that the DA’s decision to pursue a full grand jury indictment rather than a faster alternative process may signal that prosecutors are treating this matter seriously and are not necessarily inclined toward a lenient plea arrangement.