Stacie Halas, a science teacher who was identified as the porn star Tiffany Six and then fired from her position at Haydock Intermediate School in Oxnard, Calif., recently lost a court appeal that could’ve potentially allowed her to return to the classroom.

Halas, 32, was deemed unfit to teach 7th and 8th grade students after a three-judge panel came to a unanimous decision, according to her lawyer, as cited by the Associated Press.

"Although (Halas') pornography career has concluded, the ongoing availability of her pornographic materials on the Internet will continue to impede her from being an effective teacher and respected colleague," Judge Julie Cabos-Owen wrote in a 46-page decision issued on Friday by the Commission on Professional Competence, as cited by the AP.

While not much was known about Halas when she was fired from the Haydock Intermediate School in March 2012, additional details have recently come to light.

According to a Smoking Gun report, Halas starred in a pornography filmed called “Big Sausage Pizza” under the pseudonym Tiffany Six. In the video, a woman can be seen engaging in a variety of sexual activities with a male actor pretending to be a delivery man.

Jeff Chancer, the Oxnard School District Superintendent, said that he saw parts of the video and that it’s definitely “hard-core pornography.”

Halas’s lawyer Richard Schwab said that his client tried to be honest with school officials, but was embarrassed by her previous experience in the adult industry.

"Miss Halas is more than just an individual fighting for her job as a teacher," he said on Tuesday. "I think she's representative of a lot of people who may have a past that may not involve anything illegal or anything that hurts anybody."

In addition, Halas’s lawyer insisted that his client did not star in pornographic movies while teaching in any district. He said she took parts only during an eight-month period from 2005 to 2006 because of financial problems after her boyfriend abandoned her.

In speaking with the News 24 in March, Chancer said that there was no way of knowing when the porn was made, and whether or not Stacie Halas' alleged appearances in the videos happened before or after she began to work for Richard B. Haydock Intermediate School.

“There's no way to date [the videos],” he said. “They could have been made two weeks or five years ago.”

In a statement released shortly after Halas’s appeal, Chancer said that the former teacher’s decision to "engage in pornography was incompatible with her responsibilities as a role model for students and would present an insurmountable, recurring disruption to our schools should she be allowed to remain as a teacher."

In previous comments addressed to the general public, Chancer has said that Halas had broken no law or penal code while teaching at the Haydock Intermediate School.