"On the fourth bottle, when I was making it, I did realise something was definitely wrong. The colour was different, the texture was different, so I just knew it wasn't milk."
The mum let the bottle sit and noticed the mixture separated, which doesn't happen with baby formula.
"And then when I poured it from the bottle into the sink I saw how it got, that's when it hit me," Roque said. "I saw how it clumped up and I'm like, oh my god, my daughter's stomach is just the same or worse."
"You don't know they're allergic [or] if her throat had closed up from a gluten reaction," the distressed mum said.
She reported the incident to Walmart who said they would investigate the claim.
A couple was arrested in Arizona last month for allegedly running a baby formula theft ring.
Before being arrested, they allegedly managed to earn nearly half a million dollars in income from that theft.