A misdelivered package, a child on a scooter, and a federal mail truck in a quiet Florida neighborhood. Troopers now say those few minutes on a residential street crossed from mistake into felony crime.

According to a Florida Highway Patrol report, 41-year-old postal worker William White Jr. is accused of steering his U.S. Postal Service truck toward a 10-year-old boy in Escambia County after seeing the child with a package that had just been dropped at the wrong house. White has been arrested and charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, petit theft, and criminal mischief, but he has not yet entered any public plea in the case and his version of events has not been released. All of the allegations described here come from law enforcement records and media interviews, and White is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.

Composite image: William White booking photo (Escambia County Sheriff's Office) and a view of the Escambia County street from a WEAR/YouTube report; authorities allege he drove a USPS truck toward a 10-year-old.
Photo: WEAR/YouTube

What Troopers Say Happened On Kingfisher Way

The incident took place in an Escambia County neighborhood in late December, on a street identified in reports as Kingfisher Way. Details of the encounter were first reported by Law&Crime, which cited a Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) report and a local television interview with a state trooper.

Investigators say White misdelivered a package to the boy’s home. The package label listed a different address nearby. The child, whose family lives at the house where the package was left, put the box on his electric scooter to bring it to the intended neighbor, according to the FHP report as described by Law&Crime.

Florida Highway Patrol Capt. Jason King later explained the agency’s understanding of the sequence in an interview with local ABC affiliate WEAR, posted on YouTube. He said this was not treated as a simple traffic mishap.

“This isn’t just a simple, ‘Oops,’ crash with a 10-year-old in the road,” King told WEAR. “This is an intentional act by a United States postal worker.” The interview is available on the station’s YouTube channel at this link.

According to the FHP account, White saw the boy traveling with the package and believed the child was attempting to steal it. Troopers say that instead of stopping to speak with him, White “purposely drove the USPS vehicle toward the child and ran over the scooter,” narrowly missing the boy himself. The child reportedly scrambled into a nearby yard and injured his ankle while getting out of the way of the truck.

After the collision with the scooter, the FHP report states that White got out, pulled the damaged scooter from underneath the postal vehicle, and loaded it into the truck. As White began to drive off, the boy’s parents came outside and confronted him. According to the report, he yelled at the child before leaving the area.

King contrasted the situation described in the report with the type of package thefts that carriers are typically warned about. “It’s a 10-year-old on a scooter, it’s not a normal porch pirate running up snatching packages that you just dropped off,” he told WEAR. He added that “it’s amazing what a small conversation would do in a situation rather than jumping straight to force, use of force… or really escalating the situation way past where it should have been.”

From Misdelivered Package To Felony Charges

Several days after the encounter, FHP troopers interviewed White about the incident. Based on that interview and their earlier investigation, he was arrested and booked on three counts, according to Law&Crime’s review of the case.

The charges listed in that reporting are:

Aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Petit theft. Criminal mischief.

In Florida, aggravated assault typically means an assault with a deadly weapon or an assault committed with intent to carry out another felony. Courts in the state have treated vehicles as potential deadly weapons when they are used to threaten, strike, or attempt to strike a person. The charging documents in White’s case have not been published publicly, so the exact wording of the allegation has not been independently reviewed for this article. However, Capt. King’s public comments and the FHP narrative both describe the postal truck itself as the instrument of the alleged assault.

The petit theft and criminal mischief counts appear to be tied to the handling of the child’s scooter, based on the police narrative recounted by Law&Crime. Troopers say White removed the scooter from beneath his truck, placed it inside the vehicle, and left, which investigators interpreted as theft and damage to property.

White was later released from custody on a bond of 5,500 dollars, the outlet reported. Court records outlining his next appearance date and whether he has retained or been appointed counsel were not included in the accounts reviewed for this story. No statement from White or his attorney has been made public to respond to the allegations.

USPS Response And Internal Investigation

The case places a federal employee’s alleged conduct under both state criminal scrutiny and internal review by his agency. While criminal charges are handled by local prosecutors and state courts, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) also has its own investigative arm and personnel rules.

In a statement provided to the Pensacola News Journal and quoted by Law&Crime, USPS officials said: “The U.S. Postal Service takes the safety and well-being of our customers and employees seriously. The Postal Inspection Service, the law enforcement arm of the Postal Service, is actively investigating this issue in partnership with local law enforcement. We can confirm that the individual has been employed [since] 2025. The Postal Service does not publicly comment on personnel matters.”

The agency did not say whether White has been suspended, reassigned, or remains on active duty while the investigation continues. USPS also has not released any information about prior complaints or performance issues, if any, related to his work as a carrier. The only employment detail publicly confirmed so far is his start date in 2025.

Because the U.S. Postal Inspection Service is involved, investigators will be examining not only the alleged use of the vehicle but also questions about property handling and whether any federal statutes related to the mail could be implicated. So far, all known charges are at the state level.

What Remains Unclear As The Case Moves Forward

Several aspects of the case are well documented. The basic timeline, the involvement of a 10-year-old returning a misdelivered package, and the outline of the charges are grounded in the Florida Highway Patrol report and captured in the public comments of Capt. King, as broadcast by WEAR and summarized by Law&Crime. The bond amount and USPS employment confirmation are also on the record.

At the same time, key facts remain unknown to the public. The FHP report has been described in media accounts, but the full document has not been reproduced in those outlets for independent comparison. Any formal statements or interviews that White gave to troopers have not been quoted directly. There is no publicly available 911 audio or surveillance footage attached to the reporting reviewed for this article, so the only detailed narrative comes from the authorities.

It is also not yet clear what specific courtroom defenses White may offer. For example, whether he will argue that he misjudged the distance between the truck and the child, that his actions were negligent rather than intentional, or that other circumstances affected his driving. Those questions typically surface in motions, hearing transcripts, or trial testimony. None of that material exists yet in the public realm for this case.

The child reportedly sustained an ankle injury while moving out of the truck’s path, but there has been no detailed public account from the family about his current medical condition or any long-term impact. The family has also not announced any civil lawsuit against White or USPS, at least in the reporting currently available.

As the criminal case proceeds, prosecutors will have to prove that White used the postal truck as a deadly weapon and did so intentionally, not by mere carelessness. Defense attorneys, in turn, will have the chance to test the FHP account, cross-examine witnesses, and offer their own interpretation of the events on Kingfisher Way. Until those arguments appear in filings or in a courtroom, the sharpest conflict in the record is between a 10-year-old returning a neighbor’s package and a veteran federal institution that now has to explain how one of its trucks ended up at the center of an aggravated assault charge.

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