The three Tuscaloosa, Ala., police officers who were suspended after they were seen on video using a stun gun and a baton in an arrest were identified Tuesday. Officers James Kent, Phillip Champion and Gregory Pimm are on paid administrative leave after their early Sunday arrest of three University of Alabama students in a noise complaint, said Tuscaloosa Police Chief Steve Anderson in a statement.

Anderson named the officers “in our continuing efforts to ensure transparency and accountability regarding the incident,” he said. “For the safety and security of the officers and their families, only their names are being released at this time.”

Tuscaloosa and campus police cuffed students James Williford, 21, Matthew Gimlin Macia, 22, and Caroline Elizabeth Giddis, 22, at an apartment building near the Crimson Tide’s football stadium hours after a victory over the Louisiana State University Tigers.

The video shows an eight-year officer arguing with the students in the doorway of an apartment before several cops pull them out into the hall and a 12-year veteran deploys his stun gun while a two-year cop hits one of the students with a baton. Police placed those three officers on leave Monday, but Anderson’s statement the following day didn’t link their conduct to their names.

The university is investigating the actions of three UA officers who showed up at the housing complex during the arrest. Vice President for Student Affairs David Grady reached out to students’ parents with an email blast Tuesday on the run-in between police and students, AL.com reported.

“As the parent of two University of Alabama students myself, I can assure you the university is working with the city of Tuscaloosa to ensure this type of occurrence does not happen again,” Grady’s email said. “We thank you for entrusting your students to us, and we want you to know we take the well-being of all our students seriously.”

Internal affairs investigators at the Tuscaloosa Police Department are reviewing bystander cell phone and body camera videos as they start their probe of the arrest, Anderson told reporters at a press conference Monday.

“I want to assure people that we’re going to do everything that we can as a police department to rebuild the public trust and restore the trust of the public and the citizens in us,” he said.