The Air Force veteran found dead inside a Postal Service mail handling machine had been engaged for just 10 days. His fiancée, heartbroken and seeking answers, is demanding clarity about his mysterious death.
Nicholas Acker, 36, died after ending up in the machine at the USPS Detroit Network Distribution Center in Allen Park, Michigan, on Nov. 8.
Authorities believe Acker had been dead for several hours before anyone realized he was missing. His fiancée, Stephanie Jaszcz, first raised the alarm when he failed to return home.
The family of Nick Acker is demanding answers after he was killed in the Allen Park mail machine.
Days after the tragedy, his grieving loved ones say they still haven’t received any explanation for how he became trapped—or why it took so long for his body to be discovered.
“All they know is that he was in a machine,” fiancée Stephanie Jaszcz told ClickOnDetroit. “They don’t know how, when, or for how long. The autopsy is going to take four to six months. We’re living a nightmare.”
Authorities were only alerted after Jaszcz went to the facility when Acker didn’t come home. Workers realized he had never punched his timecard to end his shift and began searching the mail center.
Nick Acker was found trapped in a machine at the USPS Detroit Network Distribution Center in Allen Park on Saturday, Nov. 8.
Police are treating his death as an accident, but the investigation is ongoing.
“We want to know what happened and how long he was there,” his fiancée, Stephanie Jaszcz, said. “That’s what we want to know—how he even ended up there, and why didn’t anybody know where he was?”
Acker, 36, served nine years in the Air Force and had been working at the Allen Park facility for about a year as a mechanic. He had just proposed to Jaszcz in the days before his death.
Acker had gotten engaged just days before his death. The couple had planned to marry in the spring, and his grieving fiancée had intended to start wedding dress shopping this month.
“I had my entire life in my hand,” Stephanie Jaszcz said. “Like, the entire thing. And gone.”
“He was just one of those people whose sweetness and thoughtfulness weren’t just traits—they were his way of life,” she added. “He was very generous, not just with gifts or gestures, but with his time and his heart. He made everyone feel valid and seen.”
The USPS issued a brief statement following Acker’s death, saying it was “deeply saddened.”
“Our thoughts and prayers are with his family. The NDC is fully operational at this time,” the statement read.


