"What would've happened if I would've been home,” said Emma Graves, Pineville resident. Maybe my car wouldn't have been out front so he would've still had the nerve to break-in. What would've happened if I would've been there?"

This is one of the many questions Graves and her fiancé Daniel Majure have after their home in Pineville was broken into Tuesday night. Majure was out of town for work, and Graves was the first home.

"I'm on the phone with him and I'm like ‘I think somebody's in the house’,” remembered Graves.”

"And I say why do you think somebody's in the house?” said Majure. “And she says the frame's broken to the door."

Majure immediately called the police and rushed home. Once there they checked their surveillance cameras to see a man breaking into their home. However, even though he leaves with a bag they could not find what was stolen.

"We cannot for the life of us find what is missing,” explained Graves “Big screen TVs, gaming systems, nothing is gone."

However, as they get further into the video the man returned to the house wearing the items he took.

"The second time he is wearing my clothing that he stole,” said Graves. “The second time he breaks in he is wearing female clothing."

Dress and all, he took a couple more items including graves' jewelry and a couple of her pictures.

"Pictures of her, that had been pictures of us, that I had been torn out of," explained Majure.

Even more bizarre, the couple told us the man cut a hole in their mattress, but there was not a security camera in the bedroom, so they are confused as to why.

"I don't know what he was doing there, the cops made a few references, but regardless the bed is going away."

With the help of this video, the Pineville Police Department was able to arrest the man. They identified him as 57-year-old Charles Kemp, a neighbor of the couple.

He is charged with two counts of simple burglary, one count of criminal damage to property and one count of stalking. His bond is set at $57,250.

Although he is behind bars, the situation still leaves an uneasy feeling for the couple.

"You think you have this safe place,” said Graves. “Your home is supposed to be where you feel safe and it makes me just want to burn every piece of clothing I have. I don't know what he's touched, I don’t know what he has done with the pieces of clothing that he had."

However, the couple has no plans to leave the home they just recently got engaged in.

"We felt safe there, and I proposed there for that reason,” said Majure. “And now here we are six day later and it feels like the house isn't safe anymore. It was safe a week ago."

"It'll be safe again soon,” responded Graves. “We're going to make sure of that because this is our home. And you don't get to take that away.”

The home is also just down the road from Louisiana College. We asked the administration about the burglary, they released the following information about campus safety

They say that personal safety and security are an important aspect of orientation for all freshmen during LC's annual Wildcats Welcome Week.

LC has a working relationship with the Pineville Police Department regarding security issues.

LC campus security patrols the campus continuously day and night.

Students are encouraged to be vigilant, and to report any suspicious activity to the campus security office.

And any student who may feel unsafe may call 487-safe and request to be accompanied by a campus security officer to any location on campus.