SARASOTA, Fla. – A Sarasota art teacher faces multiple felony charges for allegedly pawning school laptops multiple times over several months last year.

Pine View School art teacher Adam Seider, 36, faces six counts of providing false ownership information to a pawn broker and six counts of dealing in stolen property after police allege he sold three laptops from the school to a local pawn shop on multiple occasions between July and November 2014, The Herald-Tribune reports.

Sarasota County School District spokesman Scott Ferguson said school officials are reviewing Seider’s employment status this week.

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“He hasn’t been terminated, it’s always innocent until proven guilty,” he said. “Someone is put on administrative leave typically, pending judicial action, or we can reassign the person if its determined they shouldn’t remain at their school or department pending the outcome of court proceedings.”

Sarasota County Sheriff’s deputies said Seider pawned three Hewlett-Packard Elite laptops on six occasions and received a total of $260 each time, but returned to buy back the machines and return them to the school to keep the scheme under wraps, according to ABC.

“He was trying not to get detected so when he had money he’d go get them out of pawn and put them back,” Wendy Rose, spokewoman for the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office told ABC. “It’s certainly something we haven’t seen before.”

The computers, valued at $1,420 each, were returned to the school, officials said.

Seider was in jail on a $15,000 bond as the investigation continues, The Herald-Tribune reports.

The news of the art teacher’s arrest enraged several parents who commented online about problems they’ve had while their children were in his class, some alleging the teacher committed other crimes that went uninvestigated.

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“Well, well…In September 2011 we contacted the school about Mr Seider’s connection to the theft of our daughter’s iPod. This came after the disappearance of my son’s iPod two year’s previously, also from Seider’s second-grade class,” Mark Devlin posted to Facebook.

“During my daughter’s second grade art class Seider asked if anyone had an iPod. My daughter, who had just turned seven years old and had bought the device with $200 of her own birthday money, was the only one who had an iPod. Seider asked to see the device so that he could ‘see how it worked.’ After returning it to her, my daughter hid the iPod in the bottom of her bag, as we had instructed her,” he continued.

“A few minutes later Seider took the class outside, and then returned to the class alone for several minutes. Just a few minutes later he then brought the class back in. Immediately after the class, my daughter discovered that the iPod was missing. She was extremely upset. When she told us what had happened we had no doubt that Seider had taken it.”

And Devlin wasn’t the only one.

“Mr. Devlin, please contact us for our story. We are in the Pine View directory. Our story is similar to yours. We need to make sure that the detective at the Sheriff’s Office knows of these incidents, which were reported to the school, so that the investigation is comprehensive!”

“My daughter was also a student in 2nd grade of Mr. Seider’s and she would come home telling me stories about him asking students if he could borrow their iPods and then never return them! I told her to keep hers hidden when she was in class,” Lori Ann Kennelly wrote. “Also, he always took cash collections from the students because he was going to throw a ‘pizza party,’ but these parties never took place!”