
By Alex Morgan. Feb 2, 2026
Two former Amazon delivery drivers in Iowa have pleaded guilty to a scheme that siphoned nearly $58,000 worth of packages away from customers who were expecting routine home deliveries. Brandon and Madison Kelderman, a married couple from Altoona, admitted in court that they intentionally diverted parcels while working delivery routes, turning everyday shipments into personal gain.
Prosecutors said the thefts occurred over a concentrated period between August and September 2025, when the couple was employed as contracted delivery drivers. According to court records, the missing packages prompted complaints from customers who never received items they had ordered, triggering internal alarms within Amazon’s loss-prevention system.
Amazon investigators began reviewing delivery data after noticing repeated irregularities tied to routes assigned to the Keldermans. Packages were scanned as “delivered” but never arrived at customer addresses, a pattern that quickly stood out in a system built to track millions of shipments with precision.
Local law enforcement was notified once the internal review suggested intentional diversion rather than routine delivery errors. Authorities later determined that the couple had kept the packages for themselves, depriving dozens of customers of merchandise and disrupting a system built on trust and reliability.
Both Brandon and Madison Kelderman pleaded guilty to Class C felony theft charges in Iowa state court. Prosecutors said the pleas acknowledge that the defendants knowingly exercised control over property that did not belong to them, with the intent to permanently deprive customers of their goods.
Under Iowa law, a Class C felony carries potential penalties that can include prison time and substantial fines. The court has not yet scheduled sentencing, and judges will consider factors such as the total value of the theft, the duration of the scheme, and whether restitution will be ordered to compensate victims.
While the crime did not involve violence, investigators emphasized its impact on everyday consumers. Customers affected by the thefts ranged from families waiting on household essentials to individuals expecting personal or time-sensitive purchases, according to reporting by People.
For many customers, the missing packages created frustration and inconvenience, along with the unsettling realization that a delivery driver entrusted with their orders had deliberately broken that trust. Prosecutors described the case as a reminder that even small-scale employee misconduct can ripple outward, affecting dozens of households and undermining confidence in delivery systems people rely on daily.
Amazon has said it cooperated fully with investigators and relies on a combination of technology, audits, and reporting systems to detect theft and misconduct. The company did not allege that the scheme reflected broader issues within its delivery network, but acknowledged that isolated cases do occur in large logistics operations.
As the Keldermans await sentencing, the case stands as a clear example of how internal safeguards and external law enforcement intersect when consumer trust is violated. For customers, it underscores the unseen systems working behind the scenes to ensure accountability — and the consequences when those systems uncover wrongdoing.
References: People.com | WHO13
The Bold Fact team was assisted by generative AI technology in creating this content























