People v. Landrine
Docket H052071
Court of record · Indexed in NoticeRegistry archive · AI-enriched for research
- Filed
- Jurisdiction
- California
- Court
- California Court of Appeal
- Type
- Opinion
- Case type
- Criminal Appeal
- Disposition
- Reversed
- Docket
- H052071
Appeal from an order dismissing charges after the trial court concluded the defendant satisfactorily completed pretrial mental health diversion
Summary
The Court of Appeal reversed a trial court order that dismissed multiple burglary, theft, and identity-theft charges after a defendant, Keena Landrine, was placed on mental health diversion. Although Landrine made substantial progress while in custody, the appellate court held the diversion statute requires defendants to substantially comply with diversion conditions before charges may be dismissed. Landrine repeatedly violated diversion requirements—relapsing on drugs, refusing recommended detox/treatment, and committing dozens of new criminal offenses—so the trial court abused its discretion by finding satisfactory performance. The matter is remanded for further proceedings on the dismissed charges.
Issues Decided
- Whether the trial court properly found a defendant had satisfactorily completed mental health diversion despite committing numerous new offenses while on diversion.
- What standard governs a court's determination that a defendant "has performed satisfactorily" under Penal Code section 1001.36, subdivision (h).
- Whether a trial court may rely on post-arrest rehabilitation progress in custody to excuse substantial noncompliance with diversion requirements.
Court's Reasoning
The court relied on the statutory text of Penal Code section 1001.36(h), which conditions dismissal on (1) substantial compliance with diversion requirements, (2) avoidance of significant new law violations unrelated to the mental condition, and (3) a plan for long-term care. Landrine violated core diversion requirements—she relapsed on drugs, declined recommended substance-abuse treatment, and allegedly committed dozens of new crimes during diversion—so she did not substantially comply. While her later remedial progress in custody was commendable, the statute does not permit a court to ignore repeated, serious violations of diversion conditions when deciding whether to dismiss charges.
Authorities Cited
- Penal Code § 1001.36
- People v. Braden14 Cal.5th 791 (2023)
- People v. Moine62 Cal.App.5th 440 (2021)
- People v. Qualkinbush79 Cal.App.5th 879 (2022)
- People v. Lent15 Cal.3d 481 (1975)
Parties
- Appellant
- The People
- Respondent
- Keena Teloca Landrine
- Judge
- Julianne Sylva
- Attorney
- S. Sheryl Leung, Deputy District Attorney
- Attorney
- Michelle D. Spencer, appointed counsel for respondent
Key Dates
- Filed
- 2026-03-24
- Opinion modified and certified for publication
- 2026-04-20
- Trial court dismissal order
- 2024-02-06
What You Should Do Next
- 1
Proceed in trial court
On remand the district attorney should pursue further proceedings on the reinstated complaints; the trial court must determine how to proceed consistent with the opinion.
- 2
Defense options
Defense counsel should evaluate post-remand options including seeking renewed diversion, presenting mitigation evidence, or negotiating resolutions; prepare to address the court's findings about noncompliance.
- 3
Consider appellate review
Either party unhappy with the appellate decision may consult counsel about seeking California Supreme Court review or other post-opinion relief within applicable deadlines.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What did the court decide?
- The appellate court reversed the dismissal of criminal charges because the defendant did not substantially comply with the requirements of mental health diversion.
- Who is affected by this decision?
- The defendant, prosecutors, and the trial court are affected: the dismissed charges are reinstated for further proceedings on remand.
- What happens next in the case?
- The matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings on the previously dismissed complaints, which may include reinstatement of prosecution.
- Why didn't the defendant's progress in custody suffice?
- Although the defendant made notable progress while incarcerated, the statute requires substantial compliance with diversion conditions during diversion; repeated new crimes and refusal of treatment meant she did not meet that requirement.
- Can this ruling be appealed further?
- Yes, the losing party could seek further appellate review, such as a petition for review to the California Supreme Court, subject to applicable deadlines and standards.
The above suggestions and answers are AI-generated for informational purposes only. They may contain errors. NoticeRegistry assumes no responsibility for their accuracy. Consult a qualified attorney before relying on them.
Full Filing Text
Filed 3/24/26; modified and certified for publication 4/20/26 (order attached)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE, H052071
(Santa Clara County
Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. Nos. C2010146, C2014427,
C2105263, C2106393)
v.
KEENA TELOCA LANDRINE,
Defendant and Respondent.
Defendant Keena Teloca Landrine was placed into a mental health diversion
program under Penal Code section 1001.36. (Subsequent undesignated statutory
references are to the Penal Code.) Even though Landrine committed several dozen
crimes while in the diversion program, the trial court found that she satisfactorily
performed because of “amazing progress” made after returning to custody and dismissed
charges against her. The district attorney appeals, arguing that the trial court abused its
discretion in finding satisfactory performance despite repeated violations of a
requirement of diversion. As explained below, we agree. The mental health diversion
statute does not authorize trial courts to find satisfactory performance unless a defendant
substantially performs the requirements imposed on diversion, which Landrine did not.
Accordingly, we reverse the order dismissing the charges against Landrine and remand
for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts underlying the charges against Landrine are derived from police reports
and the ensuing criminal complaints.
A. The Initial Offenses
This case arises out of a crime spree in which Landrine entered businesses,
hospitals, other health care facilities, and even schools under false pretenses and stole
personal property from employees and residents.
1. Docket No. C2014427
On June 23, 2020, Landrine entered a locked employee lounge at a health care
facility and took cash, credit cards, a driver’s license, and other items from employees’
bags. Sheriff’s deputies apprehended Landrine several hours later with the missing items.
The complaint in docket No. C2014427 charged Landrine with second degree burglary
(§ 460, subd. (b)), identity theft (§ 530.5, subd. (c)(2)), and concealing stolen property
(§ 496, subd. (a)).
2. Docket No. C2010146
In July 2020, Landrine entered several patient rooms at a hospital and took cash
and a cellphone, but police apprehended her outside the hospital. The complaint in
docket No. C2010146 charged Landrine with first degree burglary (§ 460, subd. (a)) and
grand theft of personal property (§ 487, subd. (a)).
3. Docket No. C2106393
In January 2021, Landrine entered a residence at a senior living facility. Landrine
claimed to be the resident’s caregiver, but the resident said she had no caregiver and tried
to use her walker to block Landrine from entering. However, Landrine pushed past the
resident, rifled through her belongings, and stole her wallet, credit card, checkbooks, $50
in cash, four pairs of earrings, and two rings. Landrine later made over $400 worth of
purchases with the credit card. The same day, Landrine infiltrated another resident’s
2
home by pretending to be a maintenance worker, and she stole cash and a silver ring.
Two weeks later, Landrine entered a third resident’s home and claimed to be a security
employee, but the resident confronted her, and staff escorted her off the property before
she could take anything.
The next month, March 2021, Landrine encountered a 14-year-old who had snuck
out in her mother’s vehicle but had run out of gas. After volunteering to help, Landrine
stole the minor’s purse and wallet, which had contained the passport, other identification,
and a credit card of the minor’s mother. Landrine later attempted to withdraw cash with
the card.
A complaint in docket No. C2106393 addressed all these offenses and charged
Landrine with identity theft (§ 530.5, subd. (c)(1)), attempted grand theft (§§ 487,
subd. (a), 664), and three counts of first degree burglary (§ 460, subd. (a)).
4. Docket No. C2105263
In April 2021, a health care worker discovered her wallet was missing and her
credit card had been used to make unauthorized purchases. She found surveillance
footage of Landrine at her workplace, and police officers obtained footage of Landrine at
the stores where the purchases had occurred. A complaint in docket No. C2105263
charged Landrine with identity theft (§ 530.5, subd. (c)(2)) and second degree burglary
(§ 460, subd. (b)).
B. Diversion
1. The Requirements Imposed on Diversion
In August 2021, Landrine applied for mental health diversion in the four cases
against her, and in September 2021 the trial court granted diversion. In requesting
diversion, Landrine’s counsel stated that Landrine would be in a program that is “intense
with high expectations,” and “if she relapses, if she begins to not take her medication, if
there is any serious behavior, we’ll be right back with her facing four cases with multiple
3
strikes.” In granting diversion, the trial court warned Landrine that “[w]hat your attorney
said is true. Relapsing, committing another crime, walking away from treatment—any of
those, and you will [be] done with mental health diversion.” And at the end of the
hearing, the trial court reiterated that “any deviation or walking away from treatment, any
relapse or problem like that [and it] is very likely you will be terminated.”
2. Compliance with the Requirements
Landrine allegedly committed dozens of offenses while on diversion, many
following the same pattern as those charged in the complaints pending against her.
In January 2022, police arrested Landrine for stealing items from two stores. Over
the next several months, she also repeatedly stole from employee areas in stores and
medical centers. In March, she entered a health care facility run by the same company
that ran the facility where she was residing and stole a wallet from an employee’s office.
In May 2022, posing as a substitute teacher, Landrine tried to enter an elementary school,
two middle schools, and a high school. A week later, Landrine put on a name tag,
claimed to be a school district official, and gained access to another elementary school.
Landrine was arrested in January but released to her residential program. Later,
she was charged for the crimes detailed above, as well as a February 2021 incident in
which she walked into a preschool and rummaged through various cabinets. However, in
December 2022, after several months without apparent new offenses, Landrine was
arraigned and released on her own recognizance.
At a hearing in early January 2023, Landrine admitted a drug relapse, but, after
being discharged from her residential treatment program, she refused referral to a detox
program. At a hearing later that month, after detailing Landrine’s new offenses, the court
admonished Landrine that, “while you’re out of custody, I need you to be not doing new
crimes. . . . [¶] No more new crimes.”
4
Although Landrine pledged to do better at the hearing, she soon committed
additional crimes. Around midnight on January 9, 2023, the day of the first hearing,
Landrine entered an elder care facility posing as a nurse and asked a resident if she
needed help, took the resident’s credit cards, and made purchases with them. A month
later, in February 2023, Landrine infiltrated a care facility posing as a nurse, entered a
resident’s room, and stole cash, credit cards, and identification. In March 2023, Landrine
pretended to be a delivery driver to infiltrate a charity and stole from employees there.
In late March, Landrine was remanded without bail.
3. Performance in Custody
In custody, Landrine’s performance was exemplary. Landrine participated in the
Reentry Correctional Program. According to a progress report from the Sheriff’s Office,
Landrine was in “excellent standing,” had “perfect attendance,” and exhibited “leadership
and service in the classes and program dorm with both peers and staff members.”
Landrine completed “37 weeks of uninterrupted program participation,” during which she
met regularly with her substance-abuse sponsor and her chaplain, completed 15 therapy
sessions, received instruction including life skills and advice on healthy relationships, and
completed three college-level courses.
C. The Trial Court Ruling
In January 2024, Landrine applied for mental health diversion on the new charges
against her, and the following month the trial court held a hearing concerning that
application and Landrine’s performance on diversion for the prior charges against her.
In support of her application, Landrine submitted the progress report from the
Sheriff’s Office, parts of which the trial court read into the record. Landrine’s social
worker testified that she had grown considerably during her recent incarceration and was
moving in “a very positive, value-driven direction.” In addition, Landrine’s counsel
asserted that her conduct since back in custody was unique and spoke very loudly in her
5
favor. Indeed, counsel asserted that in her 24 years with the Public Defender’s Office she
had “never seen anything like . . . this level of treatment engagement and treatment while
in jail.”
In its ruling, the trial court noted that it “could terminate Mental Health Diversion
by virtue of the fact that new felonies were committed.” Nonetheless, the court stated
that it faced a “really difficult” choice. It observed that “[w]hat the law and the
legislatures don’t take into consideration is human potential and the possibility to
change” and that Landrine’s most recent reports showed that she was “at the cusp of
making huge lifetime changes.” Accordingly, the trial court found that Landrine had
successfully completed mental health diversion, dismissed the older cases pending
against her, and granted diversion in the newer cases. The court explained to Landrine
that it was doing so “because in your efforts in custody this past year, you have made
amazing progress, and that kind of progress can’t go unnoticed.”
The district attorney filed a timely notice of appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
The district attorney contends that the trial court should not have dismissed the
2020 and 2021 complaints against Landrine because she failed to comply with the
requirements imposed on diversion by continuing to commit crimes and because the trial
court found compliance based on irrelevant factors. We review the trial court’s ruling
that Landrine successfully completed diversion for abuse of discretion. (People v. Moine
(2021) 62 Cal.App.5th 440, 448-449.) As explained below, we agree that the trial court
abused its discretion in concluding that Landrine performed satisfactorily in diversion
despite committing numerous crimes in violation of the express prohibition against doing
so imposed as a condition of diversion.
6
A. Mental Health Diversion
We begin by briefly reviewing the pretrial mental health diversion statute, which
the Legislature enacted in 2018. (Stats. 2018, ch. 34, § 24.) Mental health diversion is a
specialized form of probation offering a second chance to individuals “ ‘minimally
involved in crime and maximally motivated to reform.’ ” (People v. Qualkinbush (2022)
79 Cal.App.5th 879, 886.) In diversion, prosecution is postponed “to allow the defendant
to undergo mental health treatment” (§ 1001.36, subd. (f)(1)) with the goals of mitigating
the entry and reentry of individuals with mental health disorders into the criminal justice
system and providing treatment that meets the unique needs of such individuals while
protecting public safety. (§ 1001.35, subds. (a) & (c).)
A trial court may consider a defendant’s suitability for diversion if the defendant
meets two threshold requirements. First, defendants charged with certain especially
serious offenses such as murder, rape, or sexual assaults may not be placed into a
diversion program. (§ 1001.36, subds. (a), (d).) Second, defendants are eligible for
mental health diversion only if they have been diagnosed with a recognized disorder such
as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder (but not antisocial personality disorder or
pedophilia), and there is no clear and convincing evidence that the disorder was not a
motivating, causal, or contributing factor in the offense. (§ 1001.36, subd. (b)(1) & (2).)
If a defendant satisfies the threshold requirements for diversion, the trial court
considers the defendant’s suitability. (§ 1001.36, subd. (c).) A defendant generally is
suitable for diversion if diversion would not pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public
safety and three additional conditions are satisfied: (1) a qualified mental health expert
opines that “the defendant’s symptoms of the mental disorder causing, contributing to, or
motivating the criminal behavior” would respond to treatment, (2) the defendant consents
to diversion and waives a speedy trial; and (3) the defendant agrees to comply with
treatment as a condition of diversion. (§ 1001.36, subd. (c)(1).)
7
If a defendant performs satisfactorily in diversion, at the end of the period of
diversion the trial court must dismiss the charges against the defendant, and the
defendant’s arrest is deemed never to have occurred. (§ 1001.36, subd. (h).) However,
trial courts do not have unfettered discretion to determine that a defendant has performed
satisfactorily in diversion. To the contrary, the diversion statute expressly states that “[a]
court may conclude that the defendant has performed satisfactorily if the defendant
[1] has substantially complied with the requirements of diversion, [2] has avoided
significant new violations of law unrelated to the defendant’s mental health condition,
and [3] has a plan in place for long-term mental health care.” (Ibid.)
Although the mental health diversion statute does not define the term
“requirements of diversion,” the Supreme Court has recognized that “requirements for
diversion” are analogous to probation conditions. The mental health statute was intended
to “remedy . . . the inability of the trial court to ‘order mental health treatment, relevant
counseling, or adherence to a medication program unless the [defendant] was first
convicted, and then placed on probation or sent to jail at county expense.’ ” (People v.
Braden (2023) 14 Cal.5th 791, 821, italics omitted.) Accordingly, the Legislature
understood that, “under the proposed legislation to enact [Penal Code] section 1001.36,
‘ “a court may . . . impose the same rehabilitative probationary conditions on a defendant
it would have imposed had the defendant been convicted (including that the defendant
comply with a mental health treatment, plan, obey all laws, and make restitution to any
victims) . . . .”’ ” (Id. at p. 822, italics added & omitted; see also People v. Lent (1975)
15 Cal.3d 481, 486 [“A condition of probation will not be held invalid unless it ‘(1) has
no relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2) relates to conduct
which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or forbids conduct which is not reasonably
related to future criminality . . . .’ ”], superseded by constitutional amendment on other
grounds as stated in People v. Moran (2016) 1 Cal.5th 398, 403, fn. 6.)
8
B. Application
Landrine did not perform satisfactorily in diversion because she failed to satisfy
the first criterion for satisfactory performance: substantial compliance with the
requirements imposed on diversion.
1. The Requirements Imposed on Diversion
In keeping with the Legislature’s intent in enacting the mental health diversion
statute, the trial court imposed three requirements of diversion.
First, Landrine was required to stop abusing drugs. In arguing that Landrine was
suitable for mental health diversion, her counsel stated that Landrine would be in a
program that is “intense with high expectations,” and “if she relapses, . . . , we’ll be right
back with her facing four cases with multiple strikes.” Accordingly, in granting
diversion, the trial court warned Landrine that “what your attorney said is true”:
“[r]elapsing” would result in her being “done with mental health diversion.” At the end
of the hearing, the trial court reiterated that “any relapse or problem like that [and it] is
very likely you will be terminated.”
Second, Landrine was required to continue taking her medication and participating
in treatment. In addition to recognizing that diversion would terminate and she would
face prosecution if she relapsed, Landrine’s counsel recognized that she would face
prosecution “if she begins to not take her medication.” The trial court likewise told
Landrine that “walking away from treatment . . . and you will be done with mental health
diversion” and “walking away from treatment” and “very likely you will be terminated.”
Third, Landrine was prohibited from committing new crimes. Her counsel
acknowledged that diversion would terminate “if there is any serious behavior.” When
the trial court granted diversion, it told Landrine that her counsel was correct that
“committing another crime” would result in her being “done with mental health
diversion.” In addition, at a hearing in January 2023, the trial court reiterated that “while
9
you’re out of custody, I need you to be not doing new crimes,” and Landrine pledged to
comply with this requirement.
2. Compliance
Landrine violated all three requirements imposed on diversion.
First, Landrine did not stop abusing drugs. As Landrine expressly admitted at a
hearing on January 9, 2023, she “messed up” and “relapsed” into drug use.
Second, Landrine did not continue participating in treatment. As her counsel
acknowledged, when treatment staff offered to help Landrine enter a detox program, she
“did decline, thinking she could move forward without substance abuse treatment.”
Third, Landrine repeatedly violated the prohibition against committing new
crimes. Indeed, during diversion, prosecutors filed six complaints charging Landrine
with 43 new offenses. These were not minor offenses, and they followed Landrine’s old
pattern. She allegedly snuck into back offices, employee break rooms and other
restricted areas, stole wallets and other personal property, and made implausible claims of
coercion. On several occasions, Landrine also allegedly entered the rooms of elderly care
facility residents and stole from them in their presence. Finally, claiming to be, among
other things, a substitute teacher, Landrine entered two middle schools, two elementary
schools, a high school, and a preschool under false pretenses. Four of these charged
offenses occurred after January 2023 when the trial court admonished Landrine “to be not
doing new crimes.”
In light of these violations, and in particular Landrine’s literally dozens of
violations of the prohibition against committing new crimes, Landrine plainly did not
comply—substantially or otherwise—with the requirements imposed on diversion.
3. The Trial Court’s Rationale
The trial court recognized that, “by virtue of the fact that new felonies were
committed,” it could terminate Landrine’s mental health diversion and reinstate the four
10
complaints stayed as a result of the diversion. Nonetheless, the court found that Landrine
had successfully completed the mental health diversion program because she had “made
amazing progress and that kind of progress can’t go unnoticed.” We do not question
Landrine’s progress or the achievement that constitutes. However, as explained below,
the trial court lacked authority to ignore Landrine’s repeated violations of the
requirements imposed on her diversion.
As noted above, the Legislature did not leave the decision whether to dismiss
criminal charges after a mental health diversion program to the trial court’s unfettered
discretion. Instead, the mental health diversion statute expressly states that a trial court
may conclude that a defendant has performed satisfactorily only if three conditions are
satisfied: “A court may conclude that the defendant has performed satisfactorily if the
defendant [1] has substantially complied with the requirements of diversion, [2] has
avoided significant new violations of law unrelated to the defendant’s mental health
condition, and [3] has a plan in place for long-term mental health care.” (§ 1001.36,
subd. (h).) One of those conditions is that the defendant “substantially complied with the
requirements of diversion.” (Ibid.) As Landrine failed to do this, the trial court had no
authority to conclude that Landrine successfully completed diversion.
In reaching this conclusion, we do not mean to discount Landrine’s
accomplishment in treatment. The record shows that that it was highly unusual and
exemplary. However, the Legislature has chosen to structure the mental health diversion
statute in broad strokes that do not permit courts to consider such accomplishments in the
face of repeated, serious violations of the requirements of diversion. While this
undoubtedly will come as a disappointment, we encourage Landrine to continue her
laudable efforts at self-improvement.
Because we conclude that Landrine did not satisfactorily perform based on the
crimes committed while on diversion, we do not reach the district attorney’s argument
11
that the trial court improperly relied on factors such as Landrine’s performance in
custody.
III. DISPOSITION
The order of February 6, 2024 dismissing charges in Santa Clara Superior Court
dockets C2010146, C2014427, C2105263, and C21063939 is reversed, and this matter is
remanded for further proceedings on those charges.
12
____________________________
BROMBERG, J.
WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
DANNER, ACTING P. J.
____________________________________
CHUNG, J. ∗
People v. Landrine
H052071
∗ Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
Filed 4/20/26
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE, H052071
(Santa Clara County
Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. Nos. C2010146, C2014427,
C2105263, C2106393)
v.
ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
KEENA TELOCA LANDRINE, AND GRANTING REQUEST
FOR PUBLICATION
Defendant and Respondent. (NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT)
BY THE COURT:
It is ordered that the opinion herein filed on March 24, 2026 be modified as
follows:
On page 7, in the second sentence of the first full paragraph, the word “assault” is
to replace the word “assaults.”
On page 8, in the second sentence of the second full paragraph, the word
“diversion” is to be inserted between the words “mental health” and “statute.”
There is no change in the judgment.
The opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on March 24, 2026 was not certified
for publication in the Official Reports. The court has received requests for publication
under California Rules of Court, rule 8.1120(a) from the California District Attorneys
Association and from the District Attorneys for the Counties of Alameda, Contra Costa,
Marin, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Sonoma,
and Yolo. After reviewing the requests, it appears the opinion meets the standards for
publication under California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c). The court therefore orders
that the opinion be published in the Official Reports.
2
_______________________________
BROMBERG, J.
_________________________________
DANNER, ACTING P. J.
_________________________________
CHUNG, J.∗
People v. Landrine
H052071
∗ Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant
to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
3
Trial Court: Santa Clara County
Superior Court Nos.: C2010146,
C2014427, C2105263, C2106393
Trial Judge: The Honorable Julianne Sylva
Attorney for Plaintiff and Appellant Jeffrey F. Rosen,
The People of the State of California: District Attorney, County of Santa Clara
S. Sheryl Leung
Deputy District Attorney
Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent Michelle D. Spencer,
Keena Teloca Ladrine: under appointment by the Court
of Appeal for Appellant
People v. Landrine
H052071