MURFREESBORO, Tenn. – A Tennessee elementary teacher who was allegedly busted stealing student medications from a locked cabinet at Eagleville School is back in the classroom, reassigned to a different school.

First grade teacher Jessica Holland was caught on a hidden video camera stealing Adderall from a student’s prescription bottle in a locked cabinet in the nurse’s office at Eagleville School in October. Police set up the sting after the nurse reported the pills missing from a student’s medications in September, and officers arrested Holland on Oct. 11 when the hidden camera caught her in the act, The Daily News Journal reports.

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Rutherford County Schools officials placed Holland on unpaid leave for nearly two months as officers investigated the case, district spokesman James Evans told the news site.

“The case progressed from there through the judicial process,” he said. “The court charges were retired for a period of time and so no conviction was entered against the teacher.”

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The district notified the state Department of Education about the incident, but state officials did not act to revoke her license because she had not been convicted of a crime, WTVF reports.

A Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office report stated Holland admitted to deputies that she stole the Adderall for herself “because she felt like they helped her focus and be a better teacher.”

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“Holland states that she knew that the medication was in the cabinet because she had knowledge that the medication belonged to one of her students. Holland admitted that she had orally taken the medication in the past that was given to her from another source,” according to the report.

“However, she stated that she did not have a prescription for it. Holland further stated that she believed she suffered from depression and was scheduled to seek treatment from a doctor soon.”

Officers spoke with the parents of the student whose medication was swiped and they “did not wish to prosecute,” according to the police report.

The prosecutor agreed to “retire” Holland’s criminal charges – theft under $500 and simple possession of a schedule II drug – for a set period of time based on the conditions that she did not engage in other criminal activity. The teacher, who had worked for the district since 2014, had no prior issues, WTVF reports.

Evans told the Daily News Journal that Holland was reassigned to Stewartboro Elementary School as an “overflow teacher” following the Christmas break.

“As an overflow teacher, it means she doesn’t have her own home class of students,” he said. “Instead, she works daily in other teachers’ classrooms to help with smaller groups of students.”