A Windermere man accused of drugging women and then raping them on video might have more victims, police said Tuesday.

Per News 13's Crime Guidelines, we are not naming the man, but he officially was named a suspect Tuesday in the rapes of three women over several years, Windermere Police Chief David Ogden said.

More evidence was seized from the man's home in Windermere, including videos that could lead to more victims. According to the search warrant, investigators now have more than 100 videos to watch dating back several years.

Police said they now have to go through hundreds of hours of evidence, but their first priority is to identify the women they believe are connected to the case.

"We need to identify them first and foremost and make sure they are OK," Ogden said. "Just check on their well-being (and) make sure they're safe. Then we need to discuss some issues with them obviously."

Investigators are going through computers, phones and videos that were taken as evidence last month from the man's home along Bayshore Drive. According to the search warrant, detectives believe the man raped three women by getting them drunk and drugging them. He is accused of recording the sex acts, police said.

The man claims he never drugged anyone and that the recordings were consensual.

Investigators served the search warrant in April after interviewing several other potential victims who claim the man tried to do the same thing to them. One of the women said the man gave her a shot of whiskey and, although "everything was kind of hazy," she remembers the man trying to rape her.

Detectives said the incidents go back as far as 2012. The most recent one was earlier this year, police said.

Forensics investigators are going through the evidence to find out if they can make an arrest.

"We do have a case as we said before that we're looking at," Ogden said. "Clearly, he's a suspect in these things that we're looking at."

Police still have not been able to identify some of the women depicted in the videos.

Investigators are urging anyone who may have experienced a similar experience at the home on Bayshore Drive to call 911.