The former pastor of a non-denominational Christian church in Buena Park was sentenced Friday to lengthy prison term for molesting an 8-year-old friend of his daughter’s and possessing videos and images of child pornography.
Christopher Raymond Olague, 44, also was convicted Nov. 3 of kidnapping the victim to commit child molestation and attempting to dissuade a witness from cooperating with authorities.
Olague was acquitted of lewd acts on another victim, who is a relative, and using a minor for sex acts. Jurors found true a sentencing enhancement for kidnapping a victim during a molestation, but denied a sentencing-enhancing allegation of multiple victims.
Orange County Superior Court Judge W. Michael Hayes sentenced Olague to 17 years and eight months to life in state prison. Olague was given credit for 1,841 days in custody so far.
Defense attorney Mark Fredrick argued that the life sentence was unconstitutional in this case because the crime involved “light touching” over the victim’s clothes.
Deputy District Attorney Lexie Elliott countered that only the girl’s crying stopped the molestation from going further because the defendant feared getting caught. Olague viewed child pornography, some of it including bestiality and infants, before and afterward, Elliott said.
Just before the trial began, charges related to a third alleged victim were dropped because she did not want to testify, the prosecutor said.
When Olague was arrested in October 2011, he was the pastor of Refuge Southland Church at 6711 Beach Blvd. The church’s website at the time featured a photo of the defendant and his wife of 14 years, along with their five daughters, ranging in age from 25 to 6.
The victim, who is now 12, testified that she met one of the defendant’s daughters through a sister, who was a friend of another of Olague’s daughters.
Olague called the girl on Oct. 5, 2011, and asked her if she wanted to go to Toys R Us with him and his daughter, Elliott said.
“Instead of a play date, he abducted and molested her,” Elliott told jurors.
The defendant drove by the Toys R Us store, which was closed, so he moved on to a park, Elliott said. The girl was nervous because her friend wasn’t in the car when the defendant picked her up, as she had expected, and he made her sit in the front seat with him, the prosecutor said.
When they arrived at the Huntington Beach park, “she’s crying, she’s scared at this point,” Elliott said, and refused when Olague asked if he could kiss her cheek or hold her hand.
Olague then moved to unzip his pants, Elliott said.
“She sees the top of his underwear now and she’s terrified,” the prosecutor said.
Olague rubbed her legs, but backed off because she was “hysterical,” the prosecutor said.
The defendant gave the girl two $20 bills, which she refused, but he insisted she take the money and then drove her home, warning her not to tell anyone, Elliott said.
The girl did not immediately tell her parents. When the defendant called her on the phone and she was crying, her mother asked what was wrong. When she relayed what happened, her parents called police, who directed the girl to make three “covert calls” to the defendant with investigators listening in, Elliott said.
Jurors heard a portion of a call in which Olague apologized for touching the girl’s leg and promised, “I won’t do that ever again.”
The defendant offered to pay her more money and advised her not to tell anyone or he would be in “really big trouble” and it would hurt his daughter, Elliott said.
Police arrested Olague during a traffic stop and seized his laptop computer. Investigators also searched another computer in his Westminster home and a USB device and found images of “child erotica” with “scantily clad” girls 8 to 10 years old, as well as “very explicit photographs” and multiple videos of child pornography on the devices, Elliott said.
Fredrick said his client’s daughter was not allowed to play with the victim for a few weeks before the allegations because the girl had stolen money from one of Olague’s daughters.
Olague did not molest the girl and he “never exposed himself to her,” Fredrick told jurors.
The laptop belonged to Olague, but the computer in his home was used by his wife, the defense attorney said. Some explicit images that the prosecution alleged were of a relative of the defendant were actually taken by a child, according to Fredrick, who maintained that his client was “terribly over- charged.”
—City News Service
