In under three minutes, the burglar was in and out of Hot 8 Yoga with an armload of activewear. He stuffed the loot in the car’s trunk, hopped inside and disappeared down the street, comfortably carried away by an autonomous Waymo vehicle.

Nearly six months since the burglary, police have still not made an arrest or publicly identified any suspect, despite the fact that Waymos are outfitted with multiple high-definition cameras and require users to make accounts with their credit card numbers.

“I would think it would be easier to solve in a Waymo,” said the case’s detective, Sgt. Tim Faye, in a recent interview.

In the Hot 8 Yoga burglary case, San Francisco police issued a search warrant that forced Waymo to turn over information on the account that ordered the ride, video footage from the white Jaguar that served as the getaway car, police records show.

Faye said he couldn’t discuss certain details of the case, but said the Waymo user’s account information didn’t lead police to the suspect. In general, he said, it’s not unusual for a criminal to order a service with stolen information or a burner phone.

The video evidence didn’t help much either, Faye said. He said the company had not retained interior footage of the car by the time the search warrant was filed in April, and that it had kept the faces seen outside the car blurred for privacy reasons.

“It’s highly unusual in the first place that a Waymo is even used by a suspect,” Faye said. “It was disappointing that the internal video was not able to lead to the recognition of a suspect.”

Waymo does not publicly disclose how long it retains video footage. The company blurs faces and license plates in the public facing images it uses in a database designed for research