SAN JOSE — A 17-year-old boy surrendered to San Jose police after he was apparently recorded on surveillance video with another male entering and scouring an Evergreen home, then attacking two women — who were watching a baby — before fleeing.

Police said the suspect turned himself in Wednesday, five days after the Friday home invasion. The boy, whose name was withheld because he is a minor, was reportedly booked into Santa Clara County Juvenile Hall.

The intrusion occurred just before 11 a.m. Friday at a home on Shiloh Place and was mostly caught on home-security cameras the residents installed after an earlier burglary. But the cameras did not deter the suspects, who entered through an unlocked sliding-glass door, a resident told ABC7 News.

One wore a black hooded sweatshirt and blue rubber gloves as he and a second male, his face unobstructed and wearing a black T-shirt and bluejeans, went through the house, eventually armed themselves with knives and reportedly disconnecting the landline telephone.

They then went upstairs and searched bedrooms before hearing sounds from a room where relatives of the residents were watching over a baby. Police said one of the intruders tried to get into the occupied room, only to meet resistance from a relative who leaned against the door.

The intruders kicked a hole through the door and reportedly tried to injure them with the knives, but the occupants locked themselves in a separate bathroom and called 911. The suspects eventually ran out of the home. No one was injured.

Police said they are looking for at least one other suspect.

Burglaries have been on the rise in residential areas in the city, particularly Evergreen and the Almaden Valley, and while overall burglaries have seen steady decreases over the past couple of years, they remain elevated compared with earlier in the decade. Police are generally scrambling from hot spot to hot spot, limited by dwindling staffing; some residents have banded together to keep a more watchful eye on their neighborhoods, and home-surveillance systems and private security patrols have proliferated.

Anyone with information about the case can contact the SJPD robbery unit at 408-277-4166 or leave a tip with Silicon Valley Crime Stoppers at 408-947-STOP (7867) or with svcrimestoppers.org.

Contact Robert Salonga at 408-920-5002. Follow him at Twitter.com/robertsalonga.