Police Are Requesting Self-Driving Car Footage for Video Evidence

San Francisco police request driverless car footage from Waymo and Cruise to solve crimes from robberies to murders

A Waymo LLC vehicle in Chandler, Arizona.

Photographer: Caitlin O'Hara/Bloomberg
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In December 2021, San Francisco police were working to solve the murder of an Uber driver. As detectives reviewed local surveillance footage, they zeroed in on a gray Dodge Charger they believed the shooter was driving. They also noticed a fleet of Waymo’s self-driving cars, covered with cameras and sensors, happen to drive by around the same time.

Recognizing the convenient trove of potential evidence, Sergeant Phillip Gordon drafted a search warrant to Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo, demanding hours of footage that the SUVs had captured the morning the shooting took place. “I believe that there is probable cause that the Waymo vehicles driving around the area have video surveillance of the suspect vehicle, suspects, crime scene, and possibly the victims in this case,” Gordon wrote in the application for the warrant to Google’s sister company. A judge quickly authorized it, and Waymo provided footage.