City
Epaper

Indian student stranded in US after Lyft driver flees with luggage, CEO reacts

By IANS | Updated: December 24, 2023 16:00 IST

New Delhi, Dec 24 An Indian woman was left stranded in Boston, US, after a Lyft driver took ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 24 An Indian woman was left stranded in Boston, US, after a Lyft driver took her luggage and other belongings during a trip to the airport.

Shreya Verma, who graduated from the Harvard Graduate School of Design in May, took to LinkedIn to recall the experience, saying, "Dear LinkedIn community, I am reaching out with a sense of urgency regarding a distressing incident I experienced with Lyft".

"Yesterday, at 6 p.m., I booked a ride to Boston airport. Shockingly, after loading my luggage, the driver abruptly canceled, leaving with all my belongings, including my passport, VISA, OPT/EAD Card, and vital document, electronics, resulting in a devastating loss of $30,000," Verma wrote on the platform last week.

Verma mentioned she had been trying to contact Lyft's customer service, but the driver's lack of information made it difficult.

"I have been actively seeking assistance from Lyft customer service, but unfortunately, crucial driver details remain elusive, compounding the challenges I am already facing. I implore Lyft to promptly contact the driver, urging the immediate return of my belongings," she said.

However, the post received a response from Lyft CEO David Risher, who said that the team was working to resolve the issue.

"Very sorry you’re going through this, Shreya. That’s absolutely awful. Our team is on it," Risher wrote in his reply to Verma's post.

Verma again took to the platform two days after writing the post to express her disappointment that Lyft had not responded.

"Urgent: Lyft and David Risher, it's been nearly 48 hours since the traumatic incident I experienced, and I'm still awaiting your response. The gravity of this situation cannot be overstated -- I've lost everything, including vital documents. The distress is overwhelming, and your lack of communication exacerbates my fear. What if the driver is still on the road, posing a threat to others or selling my belongings? Time is of the essence!" she wrote.

Her second post drew a response from Sean Aggarwal, a member of Lyft's Board of Directors.

"Hello Shreya, sorry to hear about the situation you are facing. I just saw your post. Can you please send me your email? Best, Sean," he wrote.

Ameena Gill, Lyft's vice president of global operations, replied to Aggarwal by stating that she would contact law enforcement officials on Verma's behalf and help her retrieve her belongings.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

AurangabadComplete water shutdown observed in city

InternationalTurkey expanding footprints in Bangladesh as Yunus goes the Pakistan way

BusinessIndiGo bans passenger for slapping co-traveller on Mumbai-Kolkata flight

NationalTrinamool announces 19 events coinciding with Suvendu Adhikari's Aug 5 programme

Other SportsIndia's next chess prodigies gather in Jalgaon: Union Minister Raksha Khadse inaugurates 38th National Under-11 Championship

International Realted Stories

InternationalUS deports 39 Bangladeshi nationals amid crackdown on undocumented immigrants

International5.4-magnitude earthquake jolts Islamabad, KP and Punjab

InternationalPortugal declares wildfire alert amid severe heatwave

InternationalNepal: Second phase of South Asia's first petroleum pipeline construction under Indian assistance advances

InternationalPakistan to deport Afghan nationals as PoR cards expire