Woman fined after urine sample damages 7-Eleven microwave, police say

Authored by foxnews.com and submitted by MangoSalsaDuck

A Denver woman was cited Thursday for allegedly causing damage to a 7-Eleven store's microwave oven when she tried to heat a urine sample, authorities said.

A store clerk reported seeing the suspect, identified as Angelique Sanchez, 26, place something in the Aurora, Colo., store’s microwave before hearing a “loud bang” seconds later, Denver’s KUSA-TV reported, citing an Aurora Police Department report.

The clerk reportedly told Sanchez to clean up the mess or she would alert police. Sanchez then “wiped out the microwave onto the floor” with napkins and left, Pueblo’s KOAA-TV reported, also citing the police report.

The clerk then called police and told them she noticed “yellow liquid dripping from the microwave and the smell was unquestionably urine.”

Police later found Sanchez about a half-mile away, at a health clinic where she was waiting to undergo a physical exam and urinalysis for a potential job, according to the report.

One of the quality-check measures for a urine screening involves making sure the sample is at body temperature, or around 98.6 degrees, KUSA-TV reported.

Sanchez reportedly told police that she had “cleaned up the mess and did not understand the problem.”

“When I reminded her that urine blew up where people prepare their food, she told me it was not real urine,” a police officer wrote in his report.

“When I reminded her that urine blew up where people prepare their food, she told me it was not real urine.” - Police report

The officer said he issued Sanchez a summons for damaged property after informing her that the microwave is worth $500, KUSA-TV reported.

Sanchez was also not allowed to take the drug test that day, KOAA-TV reported.

Randomdude31 on May 6th, 2018 at 13:32 UTC »

This is a common method to fake drug tests. You gather urine from a friend and it needs to stay in fridge if kept for an extended period of time. A microwave is an easy way to warm the urine up for a drug test. My guess is she didn't have one and thought to use the gas station one.

AnExpertInThisField on May 6th, 2018 at 13:11 UTC »

You're supposed to heat up urine samples on "2"! Everyone knows that.

mutteringmutt11 on May 6th, 2018 at 13:11 UTC »

Sanchez was also not allowed to take the drug test that day, KOAA-TV reported

If she stopped by 7-11 and put a urine sample in the microwave, do they really need to test and see if she is on drugs?