A drug dealer gave a one-star review to an snitch Uber Eats rider who took a suspicious package to the pigs

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Female Uber Eats driver who refused to deliver bag of meth cops a brutal one-star review: 'Would you mind telling me what you ordered?'​

  • Uber driver refused dodgy package delivery
  • Instead she took it to police who found meth
  • Uber allowed dealer to post one-star review
An Uber rider received a one-star review from a customer who was furious she took a suspicious package to a police station.

It turned out that the rider from Sydney was right to trust her gut because it contained two grams of crystal methamphetamine hidden in a toothpaste tube.

Jess, who asked the Sydney Morning Herald to not publish her last name due to personal-safety concerns, said the way Uber handled the situation disappointed her and that she was even told off for failing to deliver the package.

Jess accepted this delivery via Uber's parcel-delivery arm, Uber Connect. Uber started offering its Connect parcel-delivery service in Australia in 2020.
Jess is a full-time schoolteacher but decided last month to join Uber Eats as a side hustle to cope with the rising cost of living. During her second shift on April 22, she told the Herald that she picked up an order in a plastic bag fastened with a black zip tie from a restaurant.

She immediately thought it looked suspicious, so she asked what the order contained. "Toothpaste," the person suspected of dealing the drugs told her, according to the report.

Jess canceled the "dodgy" 16 Australian dollar order and took the package to a police station. While on her way, the suspected dealer called and verbally abused her, the Herald reported. Jess received a one-star review for the order.

A New South Wales Police representative told the newspaper that officers had found a toothpaste tube containing two grams of meth in the package.

Jess said she tried to call Uber Eats but didn't get a response, so she flagged the incident on an online form.

A week later, the suspected dealer was still on the app, along with the one-star review, while Jess had not been paid for the delivery.

It was only after the Sydney Morning Herald contacted Uber that Jess received an apology and was told "appropriate internal actions have been taken" against the customer. Uber reimbursed her and removed the one-star review.

Jess said she complained on behalf of those who rely on Uber for a living.

I'm not going to be doing this anymore because I'm so disgusted how they've treated me," she told the outlet.

Uber didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider made outside normal working hours.

 
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