Sarai Hannah Ajai Incident Report for the Receipt and Subsequent Disappearance of Two UPS-Related Gmail Messages While Logged Into Personal Gmail Account Through Apple Mac Mini M1 Environment

 Incident Report

Subject: Receipt and Subsequent Disappearance of Two UPS-Related Gmail Messages While Logged Into Personal Gmail Account Through Apple Mac Mini M1 Environment

Reporting Party: Sarai Hannah Ajai
Date of Incident: April 25, 2026
Approximate Time: Approximately 12:06 PM
Location: *****, ***** ******
Related Device / Account: Personal Gmail account (***********h@gmail.com); Apple Mac Mini M1; Google browser session; UPS email notifications; Apple ecosystem environment


I. Incident Summary

On April 25, 2026, at approximately 12:06 PM, while logged into my personal Gmail account (***********h@gmail.com) using my Apple Mac Mini M1 environment and Google browser session, I observed that the Gmail Updates tab reflected approximately 22 unread emails. Among those messages, I observed and did receive two UPS-related emails, including an email message titled “The UPS Store Electronic Waiver for Notary Services.”

I opened the notary-related Gmail sent email message in order to print the “Agreement to Arbitrate Claims” document. After I completed that print action and exited Google print mode, I returned to the Gmail Updates tab expecting to access and print the other UPS-related receipts emails. At that point, the two UPS-related sent Gmail receipts messages that had been visible moments earlier were no longer present in the Updates tab.

Accordingly, this incident is not that the notary-related Gmail message failed to arrive. Rather, the incident is that the relevant two UPS receipts and notary-related Gmail messages were received and visible, one of them was opened and used for printing, and then the relevant two UPS-related sent Gmail emails receipts messages were no longer visible immediately afterward.


II. Service Locations and Related Two UPS Activities

The two UPS-related Gmail sent emails messages I observed were associated with UPS services rendered at the following Fargo, North Dakota locations:

1. The UPS Store #3126

3120 25th St SW
*****, ** *****
Approximate service time: 3:15 PM

2. The UPS Store #5998

4302 13th Ave S Ste 4
*****, ** *****
Approximate service time: 6:00 PM

These Gmail sent emails messages appeared relevant to UPS two transaction records and notary-related documentation generated after I selected print-receipt and email-receipt options at the checkout terminals.


III. Specific Event Description

While I was logged into my Gmail account, I observed the two UPS-related sent email receipts messages in the Updates tab. One of those messages, “The UPS Store Electronic Waiver for Notary Services,” was successfully received and accessible. I opened that message and used it to print the Agreement to Arbitrate Claims document.

Immediately after closing the print window and returning to the Gmail Updates tab, the two UPS-related sent emails receipts messages that had been visible only moments earlier were no longer visible there. I did not intentionally delete those messages. I did not authorize any other person to access, control, or manage my Gmail account, my Google browser session, or my Apple Mac Mini M1 environment during that time.

Based on my immediate review, the messages were no longer available in the expected visible locations afterward.


IV. Key Corrected Point

For clarity, the notary-related Gmail sent email message was received and was visible inside my Gmail account. I personally opened that message and printed from it. The concern arose afterward, when the two UPS-related sent emails receipts messages that had just been visible in the Gmail account were no longer present when I returned to the Updates tab.

The corrected factual sequence is therefore:

  1. I was logged into my Gmail account.
  2. I observed and did receive the two UPS transitional receipts and notary-related Gmail sent email messages.
  3. I opened the notary-related sent email message and printed the Agreement to Arbitrate Claims document.
  4. I returned to the Gmail Updates tab.
  5. The two UPS-related sent email receipts messages that had just been visible were no longer visible.

V. Evidentiary Significance

The messages at issue are significant because they appear to involve:

  • UPS transaction records,
  • checkout receipt confirmations,
  • notary-related documentation,
  • proof of service activity at two UPS Store locations, and
  • contemporaneous third-party business records that may be relevant to later complaints, declarations, or evidentiary preservation.

Because the notary-related sent email message was received, opened, and used, and because the two UPS-related sent emails receipts messages then disappeared from visible view shortly afterward, the event raises a material mailbox-integrity and evidence-preservation concern.


VI. Technical Interpretation

At this stage, the event should be described carefully as a reported mailbox-integrity or account-session interference incident. The presently known facts support the statement that the USP sent emails receipts messages were received and visible, but later were no longer visible in the expected Gmail location.

This may be consistent with one or more of the following possibilities:

  • concurrent mailbox access through another authenticated session,
  • unauthorized account-session use,
  • browser-session interference,
  • Gmail reclassification, archive, filter, or message-routing action,
  • endpoint compromise affecting the Apple Mac Mini M1 environment, or
  • broader multi-surface account interference consistent with the existing incident pattern already documented from May 1, 2025 through March 31, 2026.

A careful report-ready phrasing is:

The notary-related Gmail sent email message was received and accessed by the reporting party while logged into my personal Gmail account. The subsequent disappearance of the two UPS-related Gmail sent email receipts messages from visible view is consistent with possible unauthorized concurrent mailbox access, account-session misuse, browser-session interference, message-routing manipulation, or endpoint compromise, although the presently known facts do not by themselves establish the exact technical method.


VII. Relationship to Existing Incident History

This April 25, 2026 Gmail account event should be viewed in the context of the broader incident history already documented from May 1, 2025through March 31, 2026, which reflects repeated suspected unauthorized access attempts, authentication instability, and repeated defensive security changes affecting Verizon account controls, Apple ecosystem devices, and the home-network environment. That existing report already documents repeated multi-surface interference involving my iPhone 17, Apple Watch, Mac Mini M1, iPad Air M3, Verizon credentials, voicemail, and eSIM-related controls.

This new Gmail incident adds an additional mailbox-integrity and email-record-preservation component to that broader documented pattern.


VIII. Insert-Ready Paragraph

On April 25, 2026, at approximately 12:06 PM, while logged into my personal Gmail account (***********h@gmail.com) using my Apple Mac Mini M1 environment and Google browser session, I observed and did receive two UPS-related Gmail sent email receipts messages in the Gmail Updates tab, including “The UPS Store Electronic Waiver for Notary Services.” I opened that notary-related sent email message and used it to print the “Agreement to Arbitrate Claims” document. Immediately after exiting print mode and returning to the Gmail Updates tab, the two UPS-related Gmail sent emails receipts messages that had been visible moments earlier were no longer present. I did not intentionally delete those messages and did not authorize any third party to access, manage, or alter my Gmail account or Apple Mac Mini M1 environment during that session. The event is consistent with possible unauthorized concurrent mailbox access, account-session misuse, browser-session interference, message-routing manipulation, or endpoint compromise, and it raises a material evidentiary-preservation concern because the messages involved two UPS transaction and notary-related records.


IX. Preservation Statement

The corrected incident description is that the notary-related Gmail sent email message was successfully received and opened, but the two UPS-related Gmail sent emails receipts messages later disappeared from visible view while I was still within the same Gmail session. This incident should therefore be documented not as a non-delivery issue, but as an emails received-messages disappearance / mailbox-integrity incident involving potentially important UPS and notary-related records.

 

Respectfully submitted,

Sarai Hannah Ajai

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