TwistedSifter

‘Caught on Ring!’ – Delivery Guys Pretend To The Ring The Doorbell To Claim They Tried To Reach Customer, But There’s Video Of The Whole Thing

Furniture delivery guys at the doorbell

TikTok/ryhouchin

These days, you can get anything delivered.

I mean, hypothetically.

A lot can go wrong in the process, either accidentally, or on purpose.

Take for instance this video from TikTok user @ryhouchin:

TikTok/ryhouchin

“Castlery guys faked ringing my doorbell,” reads the caption, “and took a photo as ‘proof’ I wasn’t home. Caught on Ring!”

Castlery is a furniture company that does offer delivery. But for some reason, these guys didn’t wanna deliver that day.

TikTok/ryhouchin

You can clearly see the older man instructing the younger one to hold his finger up to the doorbell without actually pressing it, so he can take a picture.

TikTok/ryhouchin

Then they just leave.

@ryhouchin

Caught on Ring: Castlery delivery guys faking an attempt to deliver my couch. They pretended to ring my doorbell and took a photo as ‘proof’ I wasn’t home. Unbelievable. @Castlery @Castlery US #deliveryfail #castlery Edit: I will post an update soon, once I talk to someone at Castlery

♬ Monkeyshine-JP – Lt FitzGibbons Men

Apparently this sort of thing happens A LOT with large deliveries.

There’s…really no ambiguity here.

It’s already an annoying process even when it goes right.

I can’t overstate how common this apparently is.

The question is…why?

I haven’t found many answers yet, but it seems like they get paid for the delivery even if the person isn’t home (which is fair), so many prefer to just fake a not-home situation rather than actually go through the time and trouble of unloading a heavy thing. i.e. the job they’re actually hired to do.

If you liked that story, check out this one about a 72-year-old woman was told by her life insurance company that her policy was worthless because she’d paid for 40 years. 🙁

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