University of Southern California (USC)Reed Saxon / AP
According to a local news report from CBSLA, USC professors claim such accusations are false and have been working to get Trigueros's job back.
"We see her as a colleague," said Dr. Morteza Dehghani, USC associate professor of psychology. "If you work with someone for seven years, they are part of your family."
Trigueros worked for more than two decades at USC in the Seely Mudd building, which houses the psychology department. Last month, Trigueros was arrested and fired after she was accused of stealing a student's backpack with cash inside.
According to several faculty members, however, Trigueros found the backpack in an unlocked classroom. The person who staffs the nearby psychology office said that she was on vacation, so Trigueros took the backpack to a nearby storage closet for safekeeping. The next day, the student reported the missing backpack, and campus police alerted the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) to security video footage of Trigueros with the backpack.
"To me, it reeks of bias," said Dr. Jonathan Tarbox, USC associate professor of psychology. "There's no way that would happen to a white, male professor like myself."
Almost 200 faculty members and students have signed an open letter calling on USC to reinstate Trigueros.