DANVILLE — An Oakland man arrested in Tuesday morning’s armed robbery of a pharmacy is himself a licensed pharmacist who is a current executive with an Alameda County health care organization, according to state records and his own social-media accounts.

Dr. Jonathan L. Szkotak, 33, who has not yet been criminally charged, is now the subject of an investigation by the California State Board of Pharmacy, which began its probe Wednesday, a spokesman said.

Szkotak is currently listed as the Director of Pharmacy Services for the Alameda Alliance for Health based in Alameda. Its website says it is a “local, public, not-for-profit managed care health plan committed to making high quality health care services accessible and affordable to Alameda County residents.”

Police did not identify Szkotak’s profession when they released the news of his arrest. But the full name and age of the man arrested are consistent with state pharmacy records for the health alliance’s Szkotak. Available public records indicate only one California individual by that name.

State officials would not comment on the reason for their investigation, but it appears to have ensued immediately after Szkotak’s arrest.

His office phone still had a voice mail recording Thursday morning that said he was unavailable but he has not returned calls or e-mails requesting comment. Neither has the Alameda Alliance For Health.

Danville police who arrested Szkotak Tuesday night at his Oakland home still have not said if he has made any admissions or what motivated the robbery earlier in the day of a CVS pharmacy on San Ramon Valley Boulevard.

Police said a man wearing a surgical mask gave a pharmacist a note demanding pharmaceuticals and also showed a gun. The robber then fled the store and was seen driving away in a gray Toyota Prius. A witness got the car’s personalized California license plate RXZILLA, which police used with automated license-plate reader data to identify and arrest Szkotak. He posted $100,000 bond and was released after his arrest and booking at the Contra Costa County jail in Martinez.

He is also under investigation for a similar Danville robbery in September 2017 where a man also wearing a surgical mask, gray sweatshirt and gray beanie and displaying a gun robbed a Walgreens pharmacy on the same block of San Ramon Valley Boulevard of medications.

The accusations, if true, could be a bizarre end to what appears by all accounts to have been a promising career.

According to his LinkedIn account, Szkotak got a bachelor of science degree in biochemistry in 2007 from the University of Pacific, where he said he is still an adjunct professor, and his doctorate of pharmacy from the University of New Mexico in 2011. He was the director of pharmacy for the Health Plan of San Joaquin from 2013 to 2015 after a residency there. A spokesman for that agency declined to comment.

He was pharmacy director for the University of New Mexico’s health system from October 2015 to March 2017, when he joined the Alameda Alliance, according to his account.

“I am a driven and innovative Health Plan Pharmacy Administrator with a proven history of success in increasingly responsible positions,” Szkotak says on his account. The statement later says: “Dr. Szkotak is a natural leader and problem solver who can build a cohesive team, prioritize and resolve major issues, and develop, communicate, and execute a vision.”