Olivia R. Henderson Pleads Not Guilty to Two Felonies After Tiktok

Olivia R. Henderson Pleads Not Guilty to Two Felonies After Tiktok

Olivia R. Henderson pleaded not guilty on May 1 in Oswego County Court after a tiktok video about a DoorDash delivery pushed her into felony charges. The case now sits on the criminal calendar as a video filmed during a routine drop-off turns into a proceeding that could carry prison time.

Oswego County Court

Henderson faces two felony charges: unlawful surveillance in the second degree and dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image in the first degree. Each count carries up to four years in prison, which puts the maximum exposure at eight years incarcerated if she is convicted on both counts. The charges are non-qualifying offenses, so she is able to remain free without bail.

Police said Henderson was working for DoorDash on Oct. 12 when she delivered a Wendy’s order to a customer’s apartment and found the door open. They said the customer was lying on a couch with his pants and underwear pulled down to his ankles with his genitals exposed.

TikTok Video and DoorDash

Henderson recorded the man and shared a video about the situation on tiktok, saying in the post that the customer intentionally exposed himself. Police later said that after speaking with the man, they determined he was incapacitated and unconscious on his couch due to alcohol consumption.

DoorDash said that posting a video of a customer in their home and disclosing their personal details publicly was a clear violation of its policies. Henderson said on tiktok that she was banned from using DoorDash after the post, and DoorDash also banned the customer.

The Customer's Account

The customer said he discovered the video online a week later and saw that it included his first name and house number. “This made me feel unsafe, humiliated and upset.” That reaction is the part that keeps this from being just another viral-post story; the online clip tied a home address to a private moment, and the criminal case now tests how far a driver can go after a delivery goes sideways.

For Henderson, the practical next step is the court process itself: the not-guilty plea keeps the case moving while the felony counts remain live. For DoorDash customers and drivers, the immediate lesson is sharper — a delivery encounter that turns into a recording can now follow everyone involved into court, not just onto social media.

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