A Penn State Beaver professor moonlighting as an Uber driver is accused of kidnapping and harassing two female passengers early Saturday, a report said.

Richard Lomotey, a 36-year-old assistant professor of information sciences and technology at the school’s branch in Beaver County, near Pittsburgh, picked the women up around 1:30 a.m. Saturday in Homewood and began driving away from their designated drop-off point, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, citing a police report.

Lomotey allegedly told the women how good they looked and that he was single and wanted to “get with them,” the complaint says, according to the paper.

The women escaped through the back of the car, booked it down the street and called 911.

They were able to identify Lomotey to police using his photo and license plate number provided to riders in the Uber app, the report said.

Lomotey, who was still on the lam Saturday afternoon, was charged with two counts of kidnapping, false imprisonment and harassment, the paper reported.

Penn State Beaver has revoked his campus access, spokeswoman Kristen Doerschner said Saturday, calling the allegations “deeply troubling.”

Uber said Lomotey’s app access was revoked.

“What’s been described is unacceptable,” spokesman Grant Klinzman said. “We stand ready to cooperate with law enforcement to support their investigation.”