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Redditor Follows Amazon Advice On Misdelivered Package Then Gets Called Thief Two Weeks Later

by Jeffrey Stone
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

You glance outside and there’s an Amazon box squatting on your porch like it pays rent. Two weeks of radio silence pass, then your neighbor kicks off World War III, screaming “THIEF!” over a package she couldn’t be bothered to claim.

What began as a simple delivery screw-up exploded into doorbell chaos, leaked addresses, and one raging lady who apparently needed a fortnight to remember her own stuff existed. The Redditor stayed ice-cold: phoned Amazon, confirmed the label, and got corporate permission to either keep the loot or chuck it straight in the bin.

Redditor followed Amazon’s official misdelivery policy, kept part of a wrong-address package, then got accused of theft two weeks later.

Redditor Follows Amazon Advice On Misdelivered Package Then Gets Called Thief Two Weeks Later
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for stealing a package?'

2 weeks ago, Amazon dropped off a package on my doorstep. I left it there and went to the store.

When I came back, it was still there. I took it inside, called Amazon customer service.

After being asked for and giving the associate the name, tracking number and contents of said package,

I was told their policy was to either keep it or trash it. I kept a part of it, threw the rest away.

Last night, the owner of the package knocked on my door loudly. I answered it and she immediately accused me of stealing her stuff.

I apologized and asked what was talking about (I had completely forgotten about it at this point)

she mentioned that she had a camera in her car and it recorded Amazon dropping off the item (plus they take photos of the home number)

and she was contemplating getting the police involved. I remembered the items and asked about the specific one.

She confirmed it was hers, then went into a story about Amazon not replacing the items or refunding her money

and I apologized again and explained the situation, my actions and what I was told by Amazon.

And since I still had one part of her package, I gave it to her, she left after repeating her concerns/assumptions about our thievery.

Today (literally 30 minutes ago) I learned that she previously took her complaints to the only neighbor that I know and am friendly with in the complex.

Bothering him at his job for over 10 minutes, calling my family thieves and threatening police action. So, AITA for keeping (and trashing) someone else’s property?

ETA: The individual unit/apartment number was not on the package. Just her name and the townhouse/condo/complex address itself.

There’s no manager office, no lobby, no communal area, no communal mailbox. It’s a townhouse/condo type situation.

I also didn’t know her before last night. I don’t exactly speak to the neighbors except for mainly one.

Look. Many of us might have got accused of grand larceny by a neighbor over a box of who-knows-what at some point in life. The same happened to our OP, although he had followed Amazon instructed protocol.

Let’s break it down: a package with no unit number lands on the wrong doorstep in a townhouse complex. The finder calls Amazon, confirms it’s misdelivered, and is told – per company policy – to keep or discard it. The actual buyer gets refunded or resent the item. End of story, right? Wrong.

Two weeks later, neighbor shows up with doorbell-camera evidence and a whole attitude, claiming Amazon refused to help her. Cue the awkward apology and the return of the one item that hadn’t been trashed yet.

On one side, some folks insist the Redditor should have played private detective: knocking on every door until they found “Jessica with the mystery package.” On the other, the overwhelming majority says Amazon’s mistake is Amazon’s problem, not a random resident’s second job.

A former Amazon customer service rep even chimed in to confirm: this is textbook policy. When a package is proven delivered to the wrong address, the recipient at that address is explicitly told to keep or trash it, and the original buyer gets made whole. No exceptions.

This whole fiasco shines a spotlight on a surprisingly common issue: misdelivered packages in multi-unit buildings. According to a 2023 Pitney Bowes shipping index, over 1.7 billion packages were delivered to wrong addresses in the U.S. alone, and the problem keeps growing with the boom in online shopping.

Privacy rules prevent customer service from revealing the correct recipient’s full address, which leaves good Samaritans in a tricky spot.

Brandon Reich and Troy Campbell, Assistant Professors of Marketing, have explored how people redirect blame in situations like product mishaps. In a 2019 article for The Conversation, they noted: “Combined with what psychologists know about blame, this suggests that if someone is a morally bad person, we’re more likely to tell ourselves that they deserve to suffer and therefore blame them for things that aren’t their fault.”

Sound familiar? The neighbor wasn’t really mad at the Redditor. She was mad at Amazon and needed somewhere to aim that frustration.

Neutral take? The Redditor followed the rules they were given and isn’t obligated to play mail carrier. A kind gesture would have been posting in a local Facebook group or sticking a note on the box, but kindness isn’t a requirement.

Meanwhile, waiting two weeks then storming over with police threats feels a tad… dramatic. Everyone could probably use a deep breath and a reminder that Amazon has deeper pockets than any of us.

See what others had to share with OP:

Some people say NTA because OP followed Amazon’s official policy and instructions exactly.

Calm_Opinion_7112 − NTA -

1. There was no “communal area or leasing office” to put it in per OP

2. You called Amazon

3. She waited 2 weeks. Clearly it wasn’t that important to her.

Resident-Account3366 − As a former Amazon customer service rep I am going to say NTA.

This is exactly Amazon’s policy. If a package is delivered to the wrong address the person is told they should trash it or keep it.

AND - when the person who should have received it calls they will be eligible for refund or replacement, depending on the product.

The neighbor is full of it. Amazon took care of her, that is 100% company policy.

They’re not going to refuse to make it right when it’s clear it was delivered to the wrong address.

Also, the Amazon rep could see who it should have gone to but is not allowed to tell OP, to protect the original customer’s privacy.

The neighbor came after OP to try get double what she ordered, the original and the replacement.

Also, if she has it on camera why did she wait 2 weeks to ask about it? OP did the right thing by calling Amazon about the mistaken delivery.

It is unreasonable to expect someone in OP’s situation to take responsibility for Amazon’s error.

The neighbor received a refund or replacement, that is their policy. Neighbor is the A H here!

PrairieGirlrm − NTA. You called Amazon and followed their instructions. It's getting resent.

The recipient should check and make sure their unit number is on there going forward.

You could have tried posting to a community group or something, but you don't have to. Especially since Amazon is resending.

Some people argue NTA because OP had no way to safely or reasonably deliver the package themselves.

Flat-Story-7079 − NTA. It’s amazing how few people in this sub understands how Amazon works.

You aren’t responsible to do their job. You have no duty to track down the actual recipient and get them the package.

It’s unlikely that the person who came to your door hadn’t already received a refund or new item, and was just theirs to get the item you were told to...

If she knew the item was at your place, which she clearly knew, why did she wait so long to knock on your door?

grmrsan − NTA You didn't have the correct address, you called Amazon to fix it and they told you to keep it.

Supposedly, they are resending the item to the correct address. It is neither your job nor your responsibility to do detective work

and figure out where the package was actually "supposed" to go and then deliver it.

Now, it would have been a nice gesture, to go above and beyond a bit to get them thier stuff.

But just because doing that would have made you a nice person doesn't mean that

not doing it makes you anything but a slightly (honestly normal), lazy, neutral person.

cfbuzzkill90 − NTA. I don't understand why people are saying you should've delivered it to her. You don't know her or her unit number.

I've lost a package before, and the person who received it called my phone number, which was on the box.

Amazon doesn't do that. I guess other commenters are expecting you to knock on every door?

Dymetex − NTA!!! Sorry people don't LISTEN to you. Her name was on it but you don't know her (this has been made clear in comments),

HER APARTMENT NUMBER WAS NOT ON IT so you could no just put it at her door.

You reported it to amazon. THEY TOLD YOU WHAT TO DO (I also don't believe that you told amazon it was left at the wrong place and they refused to...

In these comments I've literally seen you say "the package was left on my doorstep, there is no common area or lobby"

which was immediately follow by "ThE PaCkAgE wAS iN a ComMoN ArEa, WhY wOuLD yoU nOt jUsT LeaVe iT tHerE?"

Others emphasize that the neighbor waited far too long and was likely trying to scam a second item.

Brandie2666 − NTA she waited 2 weeks to knock on your door and ask about that package. 2 weeks. Tell her tough s__t.

AhoraMeLoVenisADecir − NTA you can take actions against both her and Amazon because they violated your privacy.

I know about privacy policies and procedures, this is called "wrong delivery".

Amazon (or any other similar company) will never pick up a wrongly delivered package, they prefer to refund the order,

that's why they said that you could keep it or trash it. The customer who placed the order can be informed about the issue and the refund,

but he/she should never be informed about the recipient's name or address.

The customer was refunded immediately after your call (that's why they ask for the label details).

It's clear that somebody made a mistake at some point and put you in this awful situation.

I don't believe the camera recording story because it make no sense and she lied about the missing refund too

(too much to explain, I don't want to give more details in here because it's also about financial agreements and it would be very unprofessional).

It can be translated in a good money for you if you can find the way to document the interaction you had with the customer.

In that case, ask to a lawyer if you can initiate a legal process in the state you're living in and if it's worthy.

You're not a thief and the best thing to do when somebody comes to your house and accuses you is calling the police.

You already have all her data. Any other opinion is based on complete ignorance about how business, policies and laws,

because in many countries you're committing a violation if you try to deliver the package yourself to the person named in the label or if you try to contact them...

Last point: before the unfortunate encounter you had no idea she was your neighbor because it's your same address, just different number, unspecified.

I'm sorry for the free tons of s__t you also received in the comment section.

Some people believe YTA for not simply walking the package to the correct neighbor.

jrm1102 − YTA - So Amazon dropped a package off at the wrong address. Did you not think to look at the address and just walk it over?

One misdelivered box turned into a masterclass in misplaced blame and doorbell drama. Do you think the Redditor was totally in the clear for following Amazon’s instructions, or should they have gone full neighborhood Sherlock?

And how long is too long to wait before knocking on a stranger’s door yelling about your lost goodies? Drop your verdict below, we’re dying to know!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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