When a woman in Trinidad woke up last Saturday to find that her car had been hit overnight, without a note from the offending driver, she turned to the tapes.

Carling Uhler had a front porch security camera, and she saw that an 18-wheeler that said “CVS Pharmacy” on the side was the culprit, WUSA 9 reports.

“I looked on our video camera feed and saw the truck jack-knifed onto our street, the guy get out to look, then try and get unstuck, dragging my car along with it. You can actually see the car move several feet in the video as he drags it,” she wrote in a letter to PoPville.

Uhler and her husband told WUSA 9 that they purchased the security camera through the D.C. government’s rebate program, which reimburses people who purchase, install, and register a security camera system in the District up to $500. Now, that footage will assist D.C. Police in investigating the hit-and-run.

By the end of January, the program had issued 1,556 rebates and funded 4,172 private security cameras since its launch in February of 2016, according to figures from the city. One Tenleytown man used his security cameras, which he purchased using the rebate program, to shame people who didn’t pick up dog poop off his lawn.

Even if the culprit is apprehended, though, Uhler is still stuck with bad options for her damaged 1998 Chevrolet Prism. She told WUSA she can pay about $1,500 out of pocket to fix the car with a deductible, or she can take the Kelley Blue Book asking price, which is about $165.