A correction to an earlier version of this article has been appended to the end of the article

MARTINEZ — A popular Bay Area youth tennis instructor rewarded his alleged sex abuse victims with tennis gear, shoes and other gifts, and subject them to “humiliation” when they refused his advances, according to recently released police testimony.

A Contra Costa judge ordered Normandie Burgos, 54, to stand trial on 62 child molestation charges — 13 of which allege forcible sex acts occurred — after a December preliminary hearing. In the meantime, he remains in custody in lieu of $20.8 million bail, according to court records.

At the time of the alleged crimes, Burgos was leading a tennis academy named after him, which attracted some of the Bay Area’s most talented youth players. Police believe that Burgos molested two boys several hundred times, including during out-of-state tennis tournaments and private tennis lessons at his Richmond home.

The Contra Costa case marks the second time Burgos will stand trial for child sexual assault. In 2006, when Burgos was a popular tennis and gym coach at Marin’s Tamalpais High School, two teens came forward alleging he had touched them inappropriately during massages. Marin prosecutors charged Burgos with lewd conduct and sexual battery. He was fired from his teaching job, but the case was dismissed after jurors hung toward guilt on one count and acquittal on another.

Even during his 2010 child molestation trial, many in the Marin area stood by him, saying he was being smeared and unfairly accused. He moved to Richmond and started the Burgos Academy there, but last year, in a new criminal investigation, Burgos was charged in Contra Costa related to alleged molestation of two boys.

The preliminary hearing transcript, released last week, reveals new details about the case, including that the alleged molestation began when the boys were in their teens. One of the boys, identified as “John Doe 2” in court files, had been a student of Burgos since the age of 9. The boy told police that Burgos began making unwanted sexual advances toward him when he turned 13.

Doe 2 came forward to police in 2014 — a year before Burgos was arrested and charged with 62 felony counts — but at the time police couldn’t gather enough evidence to arrest the coach. That changed the following year, when John Doe 1 came forward with a similar story, then agreed to meet with Burgos while wearing a wire, where he elicited a partial confession.

For both Doe 2 and Doe 1, the abuse started the same way: Burgos would “stretch” with the boy during private lessons, then give him a massage over his clothes. At some point, he would suggest a partially nude massage, then begin touching the boys’ private parts and escalating into sex acts, according to testimony of two Richmond police detectives at the preliminary hearing.

Both boys said they felt scared and uncomfortable with the touching but that Burgos told them it was normal and a “way to relieve stress and play better.” He called it “body work,” according to police testimony.

“(Burgos told Doe 2) that all athletes do it,” Sgt. Kristopher Tong, who interviewed Doe 2, said under oath.

At the same time he was sexually abusing them, the boys later told police, Burgos would give them gifts that included tennis rackets, clothes, shoes and free lessons. One boy told police the gifts saved him hundreds of dollars per month. When they refused his advances, Burgos gave them the silent treatment or retaliated in other ways, according to authorities.

“(When) Mr. Burgos was angry with him, he would try to embarrass him in front of the athletes,” said Richmond police Det. Robert Branch, recounting the police interview with Doe 1.

Burgos’ attorney, Michael Coffino, argued to Judge Benjamin Reyes II that it was “absurd” to suggest Burgos committed a forcible sex act or placed the boys under duress, pointing to their statements that Burgos wouldn’t force the issue if they said “no.” He asked for the 13 more serious charges to be dismissed and said the boys — both teen athletes — were different from the typical victim in proven forcible sex cases, whom he described as “frail, vulnerable, impressionable people, usually girls, but not always,” according to the transcript.

One of the alleged victims, Coffino said, “would do anything to achieve his career goals,” and enjoyed the tennis rackets and “fancy shoes” Burgos was supplying.

“All he had to say was ‘no,'” Coffino said. Burgos’ defense did not contest the other charges during the preliminary hearing.

Reyes disagreed, and ordered Burgos to stand trial on all 62 counts. A trial date will likely be set after Burgos’ arraignment, which has been scheduled for Feb. 8, records show.

Correction: Feb. 2, 2018:

An earlier version of this article did not make clear that attorney Michael Coffino’s argument that his client hadn’t committed 13 forcible sex crimes applied only to the more serious charges facing Normandie Burgos. The coach has been charged with a total of 62 child molestation counts; Coffino did not contest the other 49 charges.