Amazon driver caught urinating in Las Vegas yard
He didn’t get off Scot pee.
An Amazon driver was canned after he was caught urinating in the front yard of a Las Vegas woman’s home Monday.
The unidentified man — wearing an Amazon vest — was caught on camera yanking down his pants after climbing out of the unmistakable blue van to drop off a package at Val Williams’ neighbor’s home, surveillance footage shared with KTNV shows.
About a minute later, he is seen pulling up his pants after making the unsolicited delivery on the side of Williams’ house.
“I expect dogs to pee outside. I don’t expect human beings to pee outside,” Williams told the outlet.
She sleuthed out the pissing perpetrator after enduring weeks of a mysterious repugnant stench coming from her front yard.
Williams repositioned her security cameras in hopes of catching the suspect.
The footage didn’t capture the delivery driver in the act, but Williams claims the evidence is un-pee-niable — he had only stopped to make a delivery to her neighbor and shouldn’t have been on her property at all.
Shortly after, she stepped outside and took a picture of an apparent urine stain in her front yard.
“He had peed all over the house and the water hose,” said Williams.
“I felt violated. I was disappointed and felt angry.”
It turns out, the driver is a re-pee-t offender.
Amazon’s local delivery service partner IBR Logistics reportedly told Williams over text that other clients had lodged similar complaints about the man.
An Amazon spokesperson confirmed to the outlet that the man was fired for the bizarre crime.
“This is an unfortunate incident, and the driver is no longer delivering for Amazon. Our Delivery Service Partners encourage their drivers to take the time they need for breaks in between stops, providing a list within the Amazon Delivery app of nearby restroom facilities and gas stations, and building in time on routes to use the restroom or take longer breaks,” the company said in a statement.
Amazon has a storied history of allegedly denying its employees basic rights, such as using the bathroom on the job.
Both delivery drivers and warehouse workers have previously claimed they were forced to pee in water bottles to avoid bathroom breaks which would hinder their ability to meet the company’s cutthroat productivity demands.
Delivery drivers have been caught urinating in their trucks and defecating in their customer’s gardens in the past several years.
Williams, who said she never intended for the man to lose his job, said she hoped Amazon would learn a lesson from the disgusting ordeal.
“Do better. You’re one of the top companies in the world. What that means is providing your workers with decency and the ability to do what is our human biological functions using the bathroom. These people work hard.”
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