DoorDasher facing felony charge, amended from misdemeanor, for alleged firearm incident after dropping off order
The case against a DoorDash driver accused of pulling a gun on a group of women advanced to Oakland County Circuit Court following a preliminary exam this week on an amended charge.
Andrew Boyer, 36, had initially been charged with a misdemeanor — brandishing a firearm in public — in connection with the alleged incident on Feb. 28 in Bloomfield Township. Soon after his arrest, police said a verbal disagreement between Boyer and the women outside a home on Woodland Pass reportedly escalated after he dropped off an order, prompting him to pull out his gun, chamber a round and yell at the women to get away from him. The group reportedly had followed Boyer to his car while yelling at him, police said.
The prosecution subsequently amended the charge to felonious assault, and a district court judge determined there was probable cause established at the July 8 preliminary exam to bind over the case to the higher court for possible trial.

Jeff Wattrick, spokesperson for the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, told The Oakland Press that the new charge was based on “evidence available.” Now, rather than a maximum 90 days in jail and/or a $100 fine, Boyer is now facing up to four years in prison and/or a fine of up to $2,000 if convicted.
The prosecution amended the charge a few weeks ago.
Boyer is scheduled for arraignment in Oakland County Circuit Court on July 21 before Judge David Cohen. For now, he’s out of jail after posting a $3,000 bond.
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