Customer claims Amazon delivery driver peed on his groceries By WLNE Staff | March 8, 2021 at 6:03 AM EST - Updated March 8 at 6:03 AM
NORTH KINGSTON, R.I. (WLNE) - An Amazon delivery driver is facing charges after a Rhode Island customer claims he caught the driver on camera urinating on the groceries he’d just dropped off.
An Amazon customer, who did not want to be identified, says he’s baffled by what happened during a Feb. 26 delivery, as seen in surveillance footage from his Ring doorbell camera. The delivery starts normally, with the driver dropping off cases of seltzer water.
The customer got a notification from his doorbell camera when the driver approached his house.
Doorbell camera records shootout between Ohio deputy and man inside home
The Warren County Sheriff s Office Tuesday released dramatic video footage that officials said depicts a Mason man responding to a welfare check by opening his front door and firing at a deputy at point-blank range.
By: WCPO Staff
and last updated 2021-03-03 12:51:54-05
MASON, Ohio â Video from a doorbell camera shows the dramatic moments a man inside a home shoots a deputy at point-blank range, as she ducks and returns fire.
The video shows Deputy Sara Vaught with the Warren County Sheriff s Office on Feb. 15 knocking on the door of a home to conduct a welfare check. A man opens the door, shows a handgun and fires. The bullet narrowly missed Vaught before she returned five rounds.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy described problems and defended the work of the U.S. Postal Service during testimony Wednesday before a House committee in Washington.The postmaster general said fundamental changes are needed to strengthen the postal service.The 11 News I-Team has reported on the complaints from Marylanders about delays in mail and package delivery and the responses from the U.S. Postal Service.Members of the House Oversight and Reform Committee heard from DeJoy directly. There is difficult work that is ahead of us to fix systemic problems that have plagued the postal service, DeJoy said.DeJoy agreed that the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic led to a surge in packages during the holiday season. He said he is proud of the dedicated employees who worked tirelessly under the most trying of circumstances. During this peak season, we fell short of meeting our service targets. Too many Americans were left waiting for weeks for important deliveries of mail and packages.