UPDATE 7/12/17 @ 2:05 p.m.

KANAWHA COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- A woman caught on camera burglarizing a home has been taken into custody.

Kelsi Shamblin, 23, of South Charleston, is charged with daytime burglary.

Investigators received a tip Shamblin was in Cross Lanes, and she was arrested by deputies from the Kanawha County Sheriff's Office and Charleston Police Department.

Shamblin avoided police Tuesday during a chase in Charleston. Three others were taken into custody during that chase.

The clip of the home burglary went viral.

According to the criminal complaint, Shamblin took multiple electronics from the home as well as prescription drugs, jewelry and blank checks.

The suspect's car was identified using footage taken from a neighbor's camera.

According to court documents, Shamblin's sister drove the getaway car.

Keep checking WSAZ Mobile and WSAZ.com for the latest information.

UPDATE 6/30/17 @ 1:30 p.m.

WINFIELD, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- A woman is under arrest after a video of a home burglary went viral on social media.

Nora Shamblin, 28, of Cross Lanes, was arrested Friday.

Police say warrants are being filed for Kelsi Shamblin, 23, of South Charleston, who they say was also involved.

Police say Nora was the driver of the car and Kelsi is the person inside who was caught on video.

Keep checking WSAZ Mobile and WSAZ.com for the latest information.

ORIGINAL STORY 6/29/17

WINFIELD, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- It's been seen over 160,000 times in six hours.

Now, police in Winfield are hoping a high-definition home surveillance video will help them catch a burglar.

The victim, Rick Petrella, says coming home to a ransacked home was stunning. But, Petrella says, he was just as stunned Thursday when he got to watch the whole thing on crystal-clear replay.

"[Our] security camera, that may turn out to be our saving grace," Petrella said.

The video shows a woman, ripping an XBOX out from Petrella's wall at his home on Woodbend Cove, and leaving with a bag full of what Petrella says contained about $5,000 of his possessions.

"As sad as it is," Petrella said. "I know we'll find this person."

Petrella's confidence is partially due to the video's vast and fast-spreading audience on social media.

The video, filed under the headline "My house being robbed", jumped to six-figures-worth of views in it's first four hours online. And, Rick says, he's already seen an outpouring of support from the community.

"All the people that reached out to us to send us their sincerest best wishes and stuff, we really appreciate that," Petrella said. "So, for every creep like her, there's a million good people out there."

Despite all the views, Winfield Police say they are still working to figure out exactly who is seen in the video.

If you know anything about who's responsible, you're asked to give the police station a call.