After spending a little more than a day at the San Mateo County jail, the pastor of a Menlo Park church arrested on suspicion of sexual assault of children as young as 13 was picked up last week by agents from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office confirmed.

Victor Elizandro Tax-Gomez, 47, from East Palo Alto, is a pastor at the El Senor Justicia Nuestra Church, located in the 1300 block of Chilco Street in Menlo Park. The church leases space in another church at that location, police said.

According to Detective Salvador Zuno of the Sheriff’s Office, Tax-Gomez was booked into the county jail on Thursday, June 1, around 11:40 a.m. and released after posting bail the following day around 7:20 p.m.

He said that the Sheriff’s Office had responded to a request by ICE agents to learn Tax-Gomez’s release date. The agents showed up at the jail, where custody of Tax-Gomez was transferred at a secure area inside the jail.

The Sheriff’s Office does not know whether Tax-Gomez immigrated illegally to the U.S. because the agency does not check immigration status, Detective Zuno said.

When someone is arrested, that person’s fingerprints go into a nationwide system.

“Very often, that is how the immigration authorities learn that somebody might be someone they’re looking for,” said San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe in an interview.

Alleged assaults

Tax-Gomez was arrested on suspicion of several acts of sexual assault after three alleged victims, all female, reported the alleged incidents to the police.

According to Wagstaffe, the three alleged victims were attendees at the church and were ages 13, 15 and 17 at the time of the alleged assaults.

The assaults allegedly took place at the church facility, in the church office and at a small house next to the church between September 2011 and May 2015, he said.

Tax-Gomez has been charged by the District Attorney’s Office with seven felony counts: several counts of digital penetration in addition to sexual battery and child molestation, he said.

According to Wagstaffe, Tax-Gomez remains in federal custody for now, but his office plans to ask for an increase in bail so that he returns to county custody to continue the prosecution process. Tax-Gomez’s bail had previously been set at $100,000. His next court date is Tuesday, July 11.

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