A Hoover High School PE teacher arrested earlier this year is back behind bars, this time accused of third-degree domestic violence of a teen family member.

Lori Michelle McCombs, 46, was arrested at 3:25 p.m. today in the parking lot of the Hoover City Schools' central office, confirmed Hoover police spokesman Lt. Chuck McDonald. As of 4:45 p.m., she was in the process of being released from the Hoover City Jail on $1,000 bond.

The arrest stems from an incident that happened at Hoover High School on Aug. 27, 2015. McDonald said McCombs is accused of grabbing the female juvenile family member around the neck with both hands. Though the victim was a family member, the incident happened at the school.

McDonald said he couldn't comment on the girl's injuries. Hoover police investigated the incident when it happened, and the victim today completed the necessary paperwork to have McCombs charged.

The school incident involving the family member was captured on the school's surveillance cameras. AL.com on March 7 made a request for the video, as well as all previous disciplinary action and supporting documents.

Hoover Schools' attorney Carl Johnson on March 21 released a copy of a letter notifying McCombs that she was suspended for 15 working days without pay, from Nov. 10, 2015 through Dec. 8, 2015 related to a physical altercation that occurred on school property. The letter redacted the victim's name. It wasn't clear if that suspension involved the altercation with a family member, or a third student.

School officials have refused to release any video of the incidents regarding McCombs.

"The board respectfully declines to produce any document other than the memorandum reflecting final disciplinary action. While the Alabama Supreme Court has opined that disciplinary decisions involving public employees are generally subject to disclosure, the Court has also recognized the viability of the traditional balancing analysis in this context,'' Johnson wrote. "We believe that the balance is properly struck here in favor of confidentiality with respect to these materials because of the special circumstances attendant to this case."

McCombs was first arrested in March following a month-long investigation into allegations that she manhandled a student. In April, a Hoover city judge dismissed the charges against her.

In that case, Hoover police on Jan. 29 were notified of an altercation that happened inside a girls' locker room at Hoover High School. The incident had reportedly happened two days prior to the report, and involved McCombs and a 14-year-old student, who is not the same family member who signed the warrant against McCombs today.

Both the victim and the witness told police McCombs was upset that the student wasn't getting "dressed out" for PE class fast enough. McCombs grabbed the student by the wrist and pulled her from the locker room into the hallway. The incident was captured on video.

Police said the altercation left noticeable red marks on the girl's arm. Hoover's Family Services detectives thoroughly investigated the case, police said at the time, and charged McCombs with harassment. Alabama law defines harassment as: A person commits the crime of harassment if, with intent to harass, annoy, or alarm another person, he or she strikes, shoves, kicks, or otherwise touches a person or subjects him or her to physical contact.

In that case, McCombs' attorney Jim Ransom filed a motion to dismiss the case. Without taking any testimony, Judge T.B. Bishop ruled, "The fact in this case as depicted on the surveillance video and in the signed statements of witness do not rise to the commission of a crime. The allegations in the complaint are not supported by Alabama Statutes or case law."

McCombs is no longer the legal guardian of the family member who filed today's complaint. McCombs' attorney, Jim Ransom, declined to comment on today's arrest. Hoover Schools' spokesman Jason Gaston said, "We always work with authorities as they look into the validity of any such allegations."