MONTEBELLO >> When she spotted her car Friday in the drive-thru of the Tommy’s in Pico Rivera, Mari Agredano-Quirino grabbed her cellphone, hit the record button and gave the repairman behind the wheel an earful.

Agredano-Quirino had just dropped off the 2010 replica Indy 500 Chevy Camaro at a Montebello dealership for service. Yet a short time later, here was her car being taken out on a trip for some fast food.

When she confronted the man driving the car, he appeared to tell her he was taking it for a test drive.

“You’re telling me that you’re test-driving the car?,” she asked. “No, why are you test-driving my car? You’re getting food from Tommy’s.”

As she continued to admonish him, he attempted to back out of the line.

“You’re getting me nervous,” he said.

“You’re not supposed to be getting food when my car is supposed to be at the dealership,” she said just before the video clip ended.

Agredano-Quirino’s video has since gotten a ton of social media attention after she posted it to Facebook at around noon on Sunday.

On Monday, the owner of the dealership, Chevrolet of Montebello, posted his own video on the dealership’s Facebook page apologizing for the incident.

“That was absolutely not authorized by the customer,” said Chris Teague to the camera. “And we absolutely do not condone it.”

Teague said the technician’s actions were against company policy, and the dealership was investigating the matter.

“The technician will be reprimanded to the fullest extent after our investigation is completed,” he said.

Teague phoned Agredano-Quirino on Monday afternoon with an apology, she said. She did not accept it.

“It was the most insincere apology,” she said. “It was more about how he was getting phone calls and messages and losing customers.”

The car, orange with white racing stripes and reportedly one of only 200 made, was taken to the dealership for an oil change and to check the air conditioner, Agredano-Quirino said in her post.

Agredano-Quirino and her husband, Miguel, waited at a traffic signal when a car that suspiciously looked like theirs sped passed them.

They followed. The car was going too fast for them to catch up to it until it pulled into the drive-thru, she said.

Before taking to Facebook, Agredano-Quirino talked to the dealership’s general manager in person Friday, and felt like she wasn’t being taken seriously.

“This guy comes in to the office smirking and giggling as if it were a joke,” Agredano-Quirino said. “I told him it wasn’t funny.”

Since the post took off, several Chevy dealerships have reached out to offer their services, and she has received an invitation from “Good Morning America” to appear on the morning TV show.

“I just want people to know that this type of thing happens every day, and just to be aware of it,” she said.

Still, Agredano-Quirino has no ill will toward the technician.

“Everyone makes mistakes,” she said. “I definitely don’t want to see him fired.”