Getting your car stolen feels violating. It disrupts your routine, puts your safety at risk, and leaves you wondering what condition it’ll be in if it ever comes back. For one Texas woman, the car did come back, but what she found inside surprised and shocked her. In a viral TikTok with more than 681,700 views, user @beyonsikee shared what she says happened after someone she describes as a methamphetamine user stole her car and kept it for an entire weekend. When police finally returned the vehicle, she filmed a walkthrough of everything left behind. What started as shock quickly turned into concern, especially after she opened one small box. What Did The Thief Leave Behind? “My car was stolen by a meth head over the weekend,” she says at the start of the video. “She kept it for three days. The police returned it to me, and now I’m gonna do a haul of everything that the meth head left in my car.” She turns the camera toward the interior, showing a passenger seat and backseat completely covered in items. “None of this is mine,” she says. “So we’re gonna go through it.” Almost immediately, she pauses to flag something she isn’t even sure she’s allowed to show. “Inside of this box,” she says, filming a Guess jewelry box, “is literal crystal meth. Ten out of 10.” She then explains that she separated the items to make sense of what was left behind. The list is long and strange. There are multiple bottles of perfume, around eight in total. “Twenty out of 20,” she jokes. “I love a queen who smells good.” What Else Was In Her Car? Next come seven pairs of wireless headphones, each missing one earbud. “I don’t know if this queen only had one ear,” she says, before rating the item a “seven out of 10.” She also finds an EBT card she can’t use, an almost-empty bottle of Paul Masson brandy, a bedazzled Dallas Cowboys cup, and no fewer than 15 lighters along with lighter fluid. “We know exactly what she was using these for,” she says. Other items include a Steve Madden purse she jokes about reselling, a razor with hair still inside it, a bag of lime-flavored chips she dislikes, and a Roku device with a charging cable. “These I’m actually considering keeping,” she says, before adding, “She did take cash from me, so I need some type of return on investment.” By the end of the video, she admits the situation is starting to get to her physically. “At this point I just started getting itchy,” she says, adding that there’s even more she hasn’t shown. She Shares More In Part Two In a follow-up video, she reveals additional details that raised new concerns. She says she found a phone in the car but decided to throw it away after receiving a threatening call. She also points out cigarette burns throughout the interior, missing floor mats, and several air fresheners hanging at once. She mentions finding an unusual number of Taco Casa napkins stuffed into the glove compartment and says the car smelled off, adding to her worry about contamination. Commenters Are Deeply Invested In the comments, viewers zeroed in on one detail in particular. “So the cops left the meth in the car when they returned it?! Am I the only one that thinks that’s CRAZY,” one person wrote. Another focused on the timeline. “GIRL… she did all this in a WEEKEND?!” Others questioned the handling of the situation. “The police didn’t take nothing for evidence? Like fr nothing???” Some commenters offered practical advice. “If you have comprehensive coverage with your insurance company, they will review the vehicle entirely and literally fix whatever is necessary and pay for a full hazard detail,” one person wrote. What To Do If Your Car Is Stolen According to guidelines from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, anyone whose car is stolen should contact police immediately and file a stolen-vehicle report. That report, or at least the case number, is required when filing an insurance claim. Drivers should be prepared to provide identifying details like the license plate number, make and model, color, and VIN. Insurance companies should be notified within 24 hours of the theft. If a stolen vehicle is recovered before authorities locate it, drivers are advised to contact both police and their insurer right away rather than taking matters into their own hands. Can Insurance Cover A Hazard Cleanup? According to biohazard cleanup specialists at Affinity Bio AZ, whether those costs are covered depends on the type of insurance policy. Comprehensive auto insurance often covers non-collision incidents, including theft and vandalism. If contamination is linked to a crime scene or dangerous materials left behind, that coverage may help pay for professional biohazard cleaning. Without comprehensive coverage, drivers may be left responsible for the full cost. Motor1 has reached out to @beyonsikee via TikTok messages for comment and to learn whether she’s pursuing insurance coverage or professional cleanup following the ordeal. This article will be updated if she responds. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team