Waitress Accused of Spiking Co-worker’s Drink With Meth

Waitress Accused of Spiking Co-worker’s Drink With Meth
This photo provided by the Dawson County Sheriff's Office, shows Sonserea Dawn Evans, jailed Feb. 12 in Dawson County, Georgia, on charges of aggravated battery and drug possession. Dawson County sheriff's investigators say Evans used methamphetamine to spike the drink of a Waffle House co-worker, who was hospitalized in a comatose state and is still recovering nearly two months later. Courtesy of the Dawson County Sheriff's Office via AP
The Associated Press
Updated:

DAWSONVILLE, Ga.—A waitress has been arrested on charges that she spiked a co-worker’s drink with methamphetamine during their late-night shift at a Waffle House in northern Georgia, causing the drugged man to be hospitalized in a comatose state.

Dawson County sheriff’s investigators spent nearly two months collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses before they arrested 43-year-old Sonserea Dawn Evans last week, said Capt. Tony Wooten, the sheriff’s spokesman. She remained jailed Thursday on charges of illegal drug possession and aggravated battery.

Wooten declined to name Evans’ 37-year-old co-worker, but said the man is still battling to recover from a drug overdose that left him critically ill for weeks after he collapsed Dec. 23 at the restaurant about 50 miles north of Atlanta.

“At one point, he was in a comatose state on a ventilator,” Wooten said. “He’s still in a medical facility. He’s been in some kind of medical treatment since the time this happened.”

Not long after the Waffle House worker was hospitalized, authorities were told by the man’s family that someone may have spiked his drink at work, Wooten said.

Waffle House’s corporate office shared restaurant surveillance video with investigators, which Wooten said showed Evans picking up the co-worker’s cup when he stepped outside for a break, then taking the cup toward the bathroom. She returned and set the drink down before her co-worker came back inside.

The video showed the man drink from the cup, Wooten said, and “within an hour, he’s getting medical attention.”

Waffle House spokesman Pat Warner said the company is assisting authorities and conducting its own internal investigation into what he called a “horrible incident.”

“Ms. Evans was terminated as soon as we reviewed the video,” Warner said in an emailed statement.

It was not immediately known if Evans had an attorney. Court records in neighboring Forsyth County show she pleaded guilty last April to possession of methamphetamine and was sentenced to probation and a $3,605 fine. Her attorney in that case, Philip Cummings, did not immediately return a phone message Thursday.