VANCOUVER, Wash. – Skyview High School teacher Jon Selby waltzed into Terra Galicia’s Vancouver, Washington home Sunday and helped himself to a bowl soup, police said.

selby“He just sat there, eating it on the couch and kicked off his shoes,” Galicia told KATU.

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Galicia was awoken Sunday around 8 a.m. when a man she’d never met poked his head in her bedroom and said “‘Oh, I’m sorry, I thought it was (somebody,)’” she said, “I don’t remember the name he said.”

“I went into the kitchen and there was food in the microwave. So, I went back to the bathroom and knocked on the door and he opened the door and goes ‘Excuse me.’ Then walks around me into the kitchen and looks for a spoon,” Galicia told KPTV.

She didn’t know what to do.

“You could tell he was not in his right mind so I was scared to even confront him, because you don’t know what he might have done if I told him you’re not supposed to be here,” she said.

Galicia decided to call the police, then quietly left her home.

“He came out of the bathroom and just acted normal, like he knew me,” Galicia said. “I’ve never seen this guy in my life.”

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Police arrived to find Selby, 46, still at the home. He told police he thought it belonged to a relative, KATU reports.

Police arrested the teacher for burglary and released on bail Tuesday. Court records show Selby had checked into a detox center called Lifeline prior to the alleged crime. KPTV reports Selby has taught English, ASL and credit recovery classes at Skyview High School for 19 years, and has a history of odd and illegal behavior.

The Oregonian and the Columbian previously reported on a two-day suspension the Vancouver School District leveled against Selby for soliciting liquid Vicodin from a student in March 2008. The student reportedly asked for extra credit for the drugs, “and Mr. Selby said he laughed and replied, ‘You got it,’” according to an internal district email obtained by the Columbian.

Selby was not charged with a crime in the incident nor was the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction notified, The Oregonian reports.

“I have kids in all three schools here and when you hear something like that, it’s really concerning,” parent Kristen Powell said of Selby’s alleged break-in.

“You always want to give people the benefit of the doubt that they want to change and things like that,” she said, “but when it comes down to your own children, you’re going to be concerned.”

Vancouver School District spokesperson Pat Nuzzo refused to discuss the teacher’s troubles, other than to confirm the district did perform a criminal background check on Selby when he was hired.