Shocking moment heartless Amazon driver slams into car before fleeing as owners fight for payout
Shocking surveillance footage caught the moment an Amazon driver slammed into a parked car before fleeing the scene.
By MELISSA KOENIG, US REPORTER
Published: 04:14 GMT, 29 December 2025 | Updated: 05:19 GMT, 29 December 2025
Shocking surveillance footage caught the moment an Amazon driver slammed into a parked car before fleeing the scene.
Rob Jordan said the hit-and-run occurred while his wife was visiting her father in Yukon, Oklahoma more than a month ago.
She did not see what had happened, he told KFOR, only realizing that someone had hit her vehicle when she left.
As the couple scrambled to figure out what occurred, they obtained Nest security footage showing the unidentified Amazon driver refusing to acknowledge the damage he caused.
It showed the Amazon truck turning right onto a road, where another vehicle was stopped at a stop light and Jordan's car was parked on the right.
The truck then crashed into Jordan's sedan as it turned onto the street and continued forward, making a screeching and banging sound as it rubbed against the car.
Soon, the Amazon driver came to a stop, at which he could be seen trying to snap debris that was caught under one of the back tires into place on the truck.
But eventually he gets back in the vehicle, emerging shortly thereafter with a package - walking straight past the car he damaged to deliver it.
At the end of the video, the driver could be seen walking past the damaged car once again to get back into his truck, where he is seen grabbing another package.
Rob Jordan said an Amazon driver struck his wife's parked vehicle while she was visiting her father in Yukon, Oklahoma more than a month ago
Surveillance footage showed the Amazon truck crashing into Jordan's wife's sedan as it turned onto a street and continued forward, making a screeching and banging sound as it rubbed against the car
The truck soon came to a stop, at which point the driver could be seen getting out to clear some debris from under the vehicle's back tire, which he tried to snap back into place on the truck
'He made no attempt to notify anybody that the collision happened,' Jordan bemoaned. 'He made no attempt to put a note on the vehicle. He just went across the cross street and delivered a package, came back and walked right by the vehicle.'
Jordan said he contacted Amazon to let them know what had happened.
They then told him to take the issue up with a third-party company, Reserv, which they said would handle the claim.
'They determined, you know, very quickly that they were going to pay me like $2,800 for this damage,' he recounted.
But when he brought the vehicle into a body shop, a repairman told him the total cost of the damage - including a broken brake light and dented bumper - is more than $3,400.