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Viral Naked TikTok Lands Oswego DoorDash Driver In Felony Hot Seat

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Published on May 04, 2026
Viral Naked TikTok Lands Oswego DoorDash Driver In Felony Hot SeatSource: Unsplash/ Marques Thomas

A TikTok delivery clip that rocketed across the internet has now landed an Oswego DoorDash driver in front of a judge. A county grand jury has indicted 23-year-old Olivia Henderson after she posted video of a naked, apparently unconscious customer inside his home during a delivery. Henderson pleaded not guilty in Oswego County Court on May 1 and is due back in June as the case moves ahead.

The grand jury returned the indictment on May 1, charging Henderson with unlawful surveillance in the second degree and dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image in the first degree, both Class E felonies, according to AOL. Prosecutors say the felony counts stem from the footage Henderson posted online. She entered a not-guilty plea through her attorney and was released on an appearance ticket, the outlet reports.

Investigators say the video was recorded on Oct. 12, 2025, when Henderson dropped off an order at a residence in Oswego and filmed a man on his couch with his pants and underwear down. Police allege the man was incapacitated by alcohol. Law&Crime reports that investigators found no evidence a sexual assault occurred and that the man cooperated with detectives.

The TikTok did what TikToks do: it blew up. The New York Post reports the clip pulled in nearly 30 million views before it was removed from the platform. DoorDash told investigators it deactivated both Henderson’s account and the customer’s account while it reviewed what happened, local coverage notes, and the company issued a statement at the time. WSTM via CNN Newsource reported on that company comment.

Video from one of Henderson’s earlier court appearances also made the rounds online after local media filmed it. But at Friday’s arraignment, the judge shut down cameras in the courtroom, and Henderson declined to talk outside the courthouse, according to AOL. She is scheduled to return to Oswego County Court in June as prosecutors continue to prepare the case.

What the charges mean

New York’s privacy laws make it a crime to secretly record a person’s intimate parts in a place where that person reasonably expects privacy. Unlawful surveillance in the second degree is defined in Penal Law section 250.45, and dissemination of an unlawful surveillance image in the first degree appears in Penal Law section 250.60. The text of those provisions is available on Justia for section 250.45 and on Justia for section 250.60.

Both offenses are Class E felonies in New York. Class E felonies generally carry maximum state prison terms of up to four years, and multiple counts can theoretically be stacked for consecutive sentences, although any punishment depends on criminal history and other case-specific factors. New York Courts provides general guidance on felony sentencing ranges.

With the indictment in place, the case shifts into the slower, less viral world of discovery and pretrial motions. Henderson’s return to court in June will be the next time both sides appear before a judge to map out what happens after the social media storm.