ATLANTA – Police believe four teens burglarized an Atlanta middle school, but were only able to catch two of them in the act.

Atlanta’s 11 Alive news station reports four teens were caught on camera when they allegedly broke into Scott Elementary School Sunday morning and attempted to steal Apple computer equipment and loot a vending machine.

Police responded to the school on Hollywood Road where they allegedly busted two of the suspects red-handed – one wearing a red backpack with 10 of the school’s iPad Minis, two chargers and snacks from a vending machine. The second suspect was wearing a green backpack stuffed with a dozen iPad Minis and snacks, according to the news station.

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“Police subsequently found two more backpacks – one outside the cafeteria and the other on the building’s second floor – and recovered 20 additional iPad Minis and six first generation iPads, plus more snacks,” 11 Alive reports.

Police were unable to identify the two other suspects, but the two they caught were arrested for burglary, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

ACJ and other media outlets did not publish the images captured by school security cameras.

Police said the teens damaged the school vending machine when they attempted to steal the snacks. The iPads were returned to Scott principal Marshall Hunt, while one of the burglars was taken to Metro Youth Detention Center. The other burglar was turned over to family, 11 Alive reports.

The school break in wasn’t the only one this holiday season.

Six children, ages 10- to 12-years-old, allegedly broke into one of two buildings at Philadelphia’s Walter D. Palmer Leadership & Learning Partners Charter school on Sunday, two days after school officials announced plans to close the school mid-year.

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The children were not students at the school, but were charged with trespassing for allegedly stealing markers and other small classroom items after police responded to a 911 call about the break in, NBC reports.

Police believe the kids broke in after they learned of plans to abruptly close the middle school Dec. 31. The Walter Palmer organization closed its high school campus earlier this year over financial and legal issues.

Teachers at the school were paid three days late earlier this month and were told the funds would not be immediately available, Philly.com reports.

The school’s financial problems were compounded this year when its budget was slashed because of overdue payments to the state teachers’ pension system and a $1.5 million court judgment for Philadelphia Public Schools for enrolling too many students, according to the news site.