HACKETTSTOWN - The former pastor of Gethsemane Lutheran Church was charged Thursday with invading the privacy of his secretary by secretly taking pictures and videos up her skirt while she was working.

After an 11-month investigation, town police on Thursday charged the now-retired Rev. Terry Herzberg, 66, of Tannersville, Pennsylvania, with invasion of privacy and criminal attempt at invasion of privacy. Herzberg was charged after turning himself in at the Warren County Courthouse in Belvidere, where he was expected to make a first appearance before a judge, according to a release from Hackettstown Sgt. Darren Tynan.

Herzberg is accused of attempting to photograph up the victim's skirt while she was sitting at her desk between Nov. 5, 2013, and June 27 of last year. He also allegedly took videos up his secretary's skirt on multiple occasions while she was sitting and standing, according to the release.

The victim, whose identity is not being released by the Daily Record, alerted police on June 27, 2016, that she had observed Herzberg - then the pastor at the church on East Baldwin Street - taking photos of her intimate body parts while she was working.

Police did not immediately identify the device or devices that allegedly were used to photograph and videotape the secretary.

A search warrant was issued, and electronics from the church and the reverend's home were seized. While the investigation was pending, the victim, a Flanders resident, filed a lawsuit in Superior Court, Morristown, in November against Herzberg and the church.

The lawsuit charges that the church violated the state's Law Against Discrimination and that Herzberg's conduct interfered with the secretary's job performance and "created an intimidating, hostile or offensive working environment."

The lawsuit said the woman left the job because she could not work in that environment.

Interim church Pastor Richard Izzard told the Daily Record in November that he, the church and congregants became aware almost immediately in June of the victim's allegations and that Herzberg retired last summer, sooner than he had planned.

"The church has no intent of sweeping this under the carpet," Izzard said last year. "It's not the intent of the church to hide it." Herzberg had been pastor since 2008.

The victim's lawsuit said she was hired in July 2010 to work as administrative assistant to Herzberg and the director of the church's preschool, and that she often worked alone with Herzberg, who was her immediate supervisor and the highest-level employee of the church.

The lawsuit said that Herzberg routinely made sexually provocative comments about her appearance, clothing and weight, and once gave her a card that said she was sexy.

In May 2016, the complaint said, Herzberg asked the woman to call up a document on her computer. He stood directly behind her and she noticed that he was holding an object over her head which he quickly stuffed into his pants pocket, the lawsuit said.

"When plaintiff returned her attention to the computer, she again perceived something above her, looked up and observed Herzberg taking photographs of her chest. Plaintiff became very upset and strongly objected to his behavior," the lawsuit said.

On June 27 - the day the victim last worked at the church - she wore a skirt and while standing in her office felt Herzberg's presence behind her. She turned, according to the lawsuit, and saw the pastor holding a camera and straightening himself up from behind her.

Moments later, the lawsuit said, Herzberg returned to the secretary's office and she sensed his presence behind her. She turned around and spotted him holding a camera under her skirt taking pictures, the lawsuit said.

The woman "became extremely upset and distraught" and Herzberg refused her demand to turn over the camera, the lawsuit said.

The victim left the church in an emotionally upset frame of mind and contacted a church council member to retrieve her personal belongings. She asked the council member to take her to the hospital because she had chest pains, at which time police were called, and she gave them a statement about circumstances with the pastor, the lawsuit said.

Working with police, the woman called the pastor and he admitted taking photographs underneath her skirt and doing the same to others, the lawsuit said.

The investigation was conducted by the Hackettstown Detective Bureau, Warren County Prosecutor's Office Special Victims Unit, and New Jersey State Police Regional Computer Forensic Laboratory.

Staff Writer Peggy Wright: 973-267-1142; pwright@GannettNJ.com.