GRAND RAPIDS, MI - The woman who fired a 9mm handgun at a McDonald's drive-thru window after twice failing to get bacon on her burger will spend the next three to seven years deciding if jail cuisine is more to her liking.

Shaneka Torres was quickly convicted March 25 by a Kent County Circuit Court jury of shooting at an occupied building and felony use of a firearm after a two-day trial.

During her sentencing hearing Tuesday, April 21, a judge ordered her to stay away from all McDonald's restaurants. It will be up to the Michigan Department of Corrections to decide if that ban continues after she is released from prison. She is also ordered to pay $1,500 for the damage caused by the shooting.

Torres was returning to the McDonald's on 28th Street SE near Madison Avenue for the second time Feb. 9, 2014, to get a replacement burger after employees hours earlier had not given her a burger with the bacon she requested.

Upon her return to the McDonald's, her new burger did not have bacon, and then she fired a bullet at the McDonald's. No one was injured in the shooting, but the bullet went into the restaurant.

An employee claimed that if she had been standing at the window at the time the bullet was fired, it would have struck her in the head.

No one from McDonald's made a statement Tuesday.

Torres seemed relaxed and was smiling with friends and family prior to her sentencing.

Defense attorney John Beason said his client did not fire at anyone in particular and argued that the gun went off accidentally.

At her trial in March, the woman driving the SUV from which the shot was fired told the jury that Torres said "B----, you don't know who you're talking to" before firing the gun.

Related: Lack of bacon on a burger was not cause of McDonald's shooting, says defense attorney

The incident has been retold in newspapers and websites worldwide and was commented upon by cable television court shows and late night comedians.

On Tuesday, Torres apologized for the incident and said she wishes she could take that day back.

"But it's over and done with," Torres said, showing visible reaction to the sentence.

Judge Paul Sullivan said there was plenty of evidence for the jury to convict her.

Sullivan sentenced her to a mandatory two years in prison for the felony use of a firearm, after which she will begin serving a one- to five-year sentence for shooting at the building.

E-mail Barton Deiters: bdeiters@mlive.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/GRPBarton or Facebook at facebook.com/bartondeiters.5