FORT WAYNE, Ind. (Fort Wayne's NBC) -- Police are asking for Ring doorbell and other surveillance video after dozens of Fort Wayne residents woke up to find that someone had shot out the windows of their vehicles.

"It was just vandalism. Nothing was taken that we're aware of," says Sgt. Sofia Rosales-Scatena.

She says someone or a group of people used BB and pellet guns Wednesday night into Thursday morning to shoot out the windows of at least 35 vehicles parked on the street or in driveways on the southwest and northeast sides of town.

More were reported Friday morning.

"Just to have a random thing happen on two separate parts of the city like this is pretty unique. We don't rule anything out but we do probably think it's probably the same people or people that know each other," she says.

Police ask that you check your Ring doorbell or other home security video to see if it captured anything suspicious over the past few nights.

That vandalism is overwhelming auto specialty shops like Precision Glass, which has worked on more than a half dozen vehicles since Thursday.

"Today we have this one which is a back glass, and we did a back glass on a Caravan this morning. Next door in a bay that you can't see right now I have one that has the driver's side door glass and the rear quarter glass are both broken out. And you can see the holes where it's been shot through," Dan Willig says.

He says he's repaired mostly the back glass on pickups, minivans, and SUVs, and says it's sad, because auto glass is not cheap.

"A couple hundred is probably on the low end," Willig says.

He says depending on parts, it can take anywhere from an hour to overnight to get your glass replaced.

"It's time out of your day, it's money out of your pocket, it's just an inconvenience, plus there's the breach of your own personal security, that feeling of violation. No one likes that," he says.

If this happened to you and you haven't reported it to the police, maybe because it didn't meet your deductible, detectives still want to hear from you.

"Sometimes the patterns help us put together things. When we finally get a suspect and we can get enough evidence to do something with it, we can check their locations, and if they were in that area. But we only know they were in that area if you report that crime," Rosales-Scatena says.

Police ask that you check your Ring doorbell or other home security video to see if it captured anything suspicious over the past few nights.

If you have surveillance video to share with police, call them at 427-1222.