People v. VanHorn CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 1, 2022
DocketA164107
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. VanHorn CA1/3 (People v. VanHorn CA1/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. VanHorn CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 11/1/22 P. v. VanHorn CA1/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A164107 ERIC JOHN VANHORN, Defendant and Appellant. (Lake County Super. Ct. No. CR5401)

Eric John VanHorn stabbed his brother in the chest. The trial court found VanHorn not guilty by reason of insanity and committed him to a state hospital with a maximum life term. Since his commitment, VanHorn has been placed into a conditional outpatient release program (conditional release or conditional release program) several times, but each time he was readmitted to the hospital due to a deterioration in his level of functioning or rules violations. In 2021, the trial court denied VanHorn’s petition for conditional release. It determined he failed to prove he does not pose “a danger to the health and safety of others, due to mental defect, disease, or disorder, if

1 under supervision and treatment in the community.” (Pen. Code, § 1026.2, subd. (e), all statutory references are to this code.) The court did not abuse its discretion in so concluding, and we affirm. BACKGROUND Between 1995 and 2001, VanHorn was arrested eight times for substance abuse-related crimes. He began experiencing auditory hallucinations in his early 20s; he was prescribed antipsychotic medication but did not take it. On a February 2002 evening, VanHorn, then 29 years old, consumed 12 beers and ingested methamphetamine. The following morning — while suffering from a delusion that he was kidnapped as a baby and that his brother was a werewolf — VanHorn stabbed his brother in the chest, puncturing his lung. The prosecution charged VanHorn with attempted first degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon. The trial court found VanHorn not guilty by reason of insanity and committed him to a state hospital with a maximum life term. VanHorn has spent almost two decades in a state hospital — the exception being time spent in a conditional release program, during which he was supervised and treated in the community. Since 2010, VanHorn has been on conditional release eight times. In seven instances, he was readmitted to the hospital after he “psychiatrically decompensated.” In 2020, a three-year period of conditional release was revoked due to his use of alcohol and methamphetamine; once again, he returned to the hospital. I. In June 2021, VanHorn — then 48 years old — petitioned for conditional release. Pursuant to a court order, his psychologist, Camille Morgan, PsyD., prepared a report opining he should not be placed in

2 a conditional release program because “he would be a danger to the health and safety of others, due to mental defect, disease, or disorder, even while under supervision and treatment in the community.” According to the report, VanHorn suffers from schizophrenia. He has also been diagnosed with moderate amphetamine-type stimulant use disorder and severe alcohol use disorder, both of which are in remission in a controlled environment. VanHorn has an extensive medication regimen, but he has expressed reluctance to take certain prescribed medication. While on medication, VanHorn experiences “delusions which are entrenched and identical to those” underlying the commitment offenses — e.g., “that he was stolen . . . as an infant and that he may be royalty.” He has a “psychotic preoccupation with religion and the occult,” drawing “symbols on walls and property in an effort to protect himself from ‘negative energy.’ ” In an interview with Dr. Morgan, VanHorn questioned his diagnosis, expressed doubt regarding the need for — and effectiveness of — his medication, and persisted in the delusion that he was kidnapped as an infant. The report catalogued VanHorn’s eight prior conditional releases beginning in 2010, as well as the circumstances resulting in his readmission to the state hospital. In seven instances, VanHorn was readmitted for “psychiatric decompensation.”1 In 2017, he was placed in a conditional release program for the eighth time. In 2019 — and while on conditional release — he abused his antianxiety and antipsychotic medications, and he twice tested positive for methamphetamine. In February 2020, VanHorn submitted a cold urine sample that tested positive for adulteration and

1 For example, while on conditional release in 2016, VanHorn set fire to cardboard and other materials in a barbeque. VanHorn initially claimed he was cleaning the barbeque, but he later admitted he was conducting a “ ‘spiritual cleansing.’ ”

3 methamphetamine. When asked about it, VanHorn initially claimed naiveté. Eventually, however, he admitted trying “to ‘cheat’ the test by storing clean urine in his refrigerator because he planned to drink alcohol.” According to the report, VanHorn’s response — which reflected “antisocial and criminal thinking of trying to ‘game the system’ or beat the odds” — “places him at risk for destabilization and ultimately dangerous behavior. It also impairs [the program’s] ability to successfully supervise him and monitor his functioning in the community, as so much of [the program’s] supervision relies on an individual’s transparency with the treatment team, not to mention one’s practice of sound judgment.” VanHorn’s meth- amphetamine use, the report concluded, placed him at risk of psychiatric destabilization and increased his risk of violence “substantially beyond that which [the program] can safely monitor in the community.” As the report explained, VanHorn’s mental state was “extremely fragile,” and he had “distortions, religiosity, and bizarre ideation that approach delusional ideation. Historically, he has psychiatrically decompensated quickly and severely in the community under [conditional release]. Engagement in any substance use place[d] him at considerable risk for psychiatric decompensation given the delicacy of his psychiatric stability,” which in turn placed him at risk of “dangerous behavior.” Dr. Morgan opined that while VanHorn did not meet the criteria for an involuntary medication order based on dangerousness, he would benefit from the structure provided in the state hospital. The report noted he had “engaged in several rule-breaking incidents and one aggressive act” since March 2020. The most recent incident occurred in January 2021 when he left “the dining room and forcefully and aggressively kicked the . . . doors leading outside of the building.”

4 Dr. Morgan evaluated VanHorn’s risk of violence. She noted he continued to exhibit symptoms of schizophrenia, “including paranoid and grandiose delusions which are . . . similar, to those he exhibited around the time of his instant offense,” and “psychotic preoccupation with the occult.” She also opined VanHorn possessed “poor insight” into “his current psychiatric symptoms, and . . . the nature of his psychiatric diagnosis,” as he believed his “symptoms were drug-induced and not due to a chronic psychotic illness.” According to Dr. Morgan, he also possessed “incomplete insight into his need for ongoing substance recovery treatment” because he had not meaningfully participated in treatment since his rehospitalization in 2020. Finally, she opined VanHorn might be unable to maintain stability in a “more stressful community environment” because his medication regimen had not been stabilized and he refused to take clozapine, a suggested medication. Finally, the report noted the hospital’s conditional release liaison determined VanHorn was “NOT . . .

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Bluebook (online)
People v. VanHorn CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-vanhorn-ca13-calctapp-2022.