REFORM and AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 20, 2015.




                                          S   In The
                                Court of Appeals
                         Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                       No. 05-14-00824-CR

                              STEVEN LEE GORDON, Appellant
                                           V.
                               THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                       On Appeal from the 219th Judicial District Court
                                    Collin County, Texas
                           Trial Court Cause No. 219-81751-2013

                              MEMORANDUM OPINION
                           Before Justices Francis, Brown, and Stoddart
                                    Opinion by Justice Brown


       A jury convicted Steven Lee Gordon of criminal solicitation of capital murder after

finding he paid someone to kill his wife. The trial court assessed punishment at sixty years in

prison. On appeal, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to

support (1) the jury’s rejection of his affirmative defense of renunciation and (2) the trial court’s

rejection of his renunciation defense at punishment. He also complains about errors in the

judgment.    We conclude his sufficiency issues are without merit but sustain in part his

complaints regarding the judgment. We modify the judgment and affirm as modified.

       Appellant met Oprensie Juhol during a business trip to Malaysia, subsequently married

her, and had three children. After he became addicted to Ambien and Xanax, quit working, and

was sleeping all the time, Juhol told him she wanted a divorce. Worried that she would take their
children to Malaysia, appellant posted an item on craigslist.com wanting information on how to

get her green card revoked. Robert Bass responded.

       Bass told appellant he had an uncle who worked as a police officer and was nearing

retirement. Bass said he could get his uncle to plant drugs in Juhol’s vehicle and have Juhol

stopped and arrested for drug possession, which would result in her being deported. Appellant

met Bass and gave him $5000 to execute the plan. A few days later, appellant gave Bass an

additional $4000 for the uncle to get appellant’s sentence for prescription fraud reduced by

setting him up as an informant.

       Shortly after getting paid, Bass told appellant his uncle could not stop Juhol’s vehicle

because of some issue with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).             At that point,

appellant and Bass came up with a new plan to kill Juhol, and appellant gave Bass an additional

$15,000. The murder was supposed to occur on May 7, 2013, while appellant was in court-

ordered rehab for prescription fraud so that he would have an alibi. Appellant went into rehab as

scheduled. When he had not heard anything two days later, he left rehab and learned Juhol was

not dead. Appellant was told the shooter, who was reportedly Bass’s brother or nephew, had fled

to Arizona because he believed he had been identified.

       At that point, appellant paid Bass another $10,000 to hire a second shooter, “Bruno.” As

before, appellant went into rehab so that he would have an alibi. Again, appellant left rehab

early and found that Juhol had not been killed. That night, May 19, appellant told Juhol someone

had tried to kill her. When she asked why, he told her “you bump on people,” which Juhol

understood to mean that she hurt people’s feelings.        He also said that some people “hate

foreigners.” Appellant left the house and said he was going to the police, but Juhol said he

returned too quickly for him to have actually gone to the police station.




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       That same night, appellant sent a series of texts to Bass questioning why the murder had

not occurred and wanting Bass to “take her out tonight.” He asked, “Is it going to be done or are

you walking away from this leaving me screwed?” He said he was able to come up with the “25

grand that Bruno wants for the job” and asked if he would still do it. Appellant asked if it could

be done that night, and said the door was unlocked and there was no company. Appellant

threatened to go to internal affairs and report Bass’s uncle if the murder was not done.

       Bass responded the next morning with several texts:

               It was scheduled. For the 21st. To give u time to clear urself.

               How dar u threaten my unc. . . If u were just a little bit more patience
               [sic]. . .

               You don’t need to no [sic] when . . . it was going to be done . . .

               But u threaten my uncl

               This is bruno…you want to threaten AB..? We will teach u a lesson..
               About AB….mother fucker

AB was identified as the Aryan Brotherhood.

       Worried that he had become the target, appellant immediately went to the Allen Police

Department, where he talked to Sgt. Marshall DeBlanc in the Internal Affairs Division and Cpl.

Christopher Mayfield in the Criminal Investigations Division. The interviews were recorded and

played for the jury. In the interviews, appellant recounted how he placed a post on craigslist to

get his wife deported and how it turned into a murder plan. Appellant, however, claimed that he

went along with the murder plan because Bass threatened him and he was trying to get

information so that he could go to the police. Several times during the interview, appellant

voiced concern that he had left his court-ordered rehab early and wanted DeBlanc to contact his

probation officer so that he would not be jailed. As part of their investigation, the police

followed appellant to his bank, where he obtained bank receipts showing that he had deposited


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almost $31,000 from a Fidelity account into his bank account on April 29, 2013, and then

withdrawn $28,000 in cash three days later.

       After investigating appellant’s story, police arrested appellant later that day and had Bass

arrested the next day. The police also concluded “Bruno” and the first shooter were “completely

fictitious” and found no evidence of a “corrupt cop.” Rather, Bass was a “con” with multiple

arrests. Both DeBlanc and Mayfield agreed that there was no existing investigation into Bass

and the police would not have known about the plot against Juhol if appellant had not come

forward.

       After hearing the evidence, the jury rejected appellant’s affirmative defense of

renunciation and found him guilty of criminal solicitation of capital murder. Appellant elected

for the trial court to determine punishment. At the punishment hearing, Juhol testified that a

couple of months before this offense, appellant made her a cup of instant coffee. Afterwards,

while driving to a doctor’s appointment, she was sleepy, her heart was racing, and she had

trouble breathing. The next day, appellant made her coffee again. This time, she noticed her

coffee had a white powder in it and did not drink it. Each time after that, she said her instant

coffee had white powder in it, and appellant would then call her at work and ask how she was

feeling. Ultimately, she checked her container of instant coffee and saw white powder in it. She

gave the container of coffee to a friend to hold for her until she took it to the Allen police. The

police sent it to a lab, where it tested positive for Ambien.

       Appellant testified at punishment and denied putting Ambien in his wife’s coffee.

Rather, he suspected his wife poisoned him, explaining that he became ill after his wife returned

from a trip to Malaysia in 2010 and lost 120 pounds over a period of about six months.

       When asked why he hired someone to kill Juhol instead of just divorcing her, he said it

was “difficult to answer” but explained he became “enraged.” He acknowledged his choices

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were bad and said he was ashamed of himself. He said the idea was to have her deported and

then changed to a murder plan, which he was “uncomfortable” with but “went along with it.” He

claimed he “tried to put a stop to it early on” by telling Bass he was going to the police, but Bass

responded with threats, leaving him “stuck between a rock and hard place.” He ultimately went

to police because he “just couldn’t do that to [his] children.” Appellant asked for a renunciation

finding, but the trial court rejected his request.

        In his first and second issues, appellant contends the evidence was legally and factually

insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of his affirmative defense of renunciation.

        We may review a jury’s rejection of an affirmative defense for legal and factual

sufficiency. Butcher v. State, 454 S.W.3d 13, 20 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015). In a legal sufficiency

review, we first determine whether the record contains a scintilla of evidence favorable to the

factfinder’s decision and disregard all evidence to the contrary unless a reasonable factfinder

could not. Id. (citing Matlock v. State, 392 S.W.3d 662, 669–70 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013)). We

overturn the jury’s finding only if the evidence conclusively proves his affirmative defense and

no reasonable factfinder could believe otherwise.          Id.   In a factual sufficiency review, we

examine the evidence in a neutral light and overturn the factfinder’s decision only if it is so

against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust,

conscience-shocking, or clearly biased. Id. In both reviews, we defer to the jury’s determination

of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to give the evidence. Matlock, 392 S.W.3d at

670–71.

        It is an affirmative defense to prosecution for criminal solicitation if “under

circumstances manifesting a voluntary and complete renunciation of his criminal objective the

actor countermanded his solicitation . . . before commission of the object offense and took

further affirmative action that prevented the commission of the object offense.” TEX. PENAL

                                                     –5–
CODE ANN. § 15.04(b). Thus, under the statute, a defendant must countermand the solicitation

and the renunciation must be voluntary.

       The penal code does not define “countermand.” Where a statutory term is not defined by

the Legislature, we give that term its ordinary meaning. Morrow v. State, 862 S.W.2d 612, 614

(Tex. Crim. App. 1993). In consulting dictionaries for the meaning of a particular word, we look

to the lexicographical alternatives the Legislature most likely had in mind, taking into account

the context provided by the phrase, subsection of the statute, and overall statutory scheme in

which the word appears. Cornet v. State, 359 S.W.3d 217, 222 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).

       The term “countermand” is defined by Webster’s Dictionary to mean “to revoke (a

former command)” or to “cancel or rescind (an order) by giving a contrary order”; “to recall or

order back by a superseding contrary order”; or “to stop or prohibit by revoking an order or

issuing a contrary order.” WEBSTER’S THIRD INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 519 (1981). Thus, to

have countermanded his solicitation of his wife’s murder, appellant must have revoked,

rescinded, or recalled his earlier order to Bass. Here, there is no evidence that appellant ever

communicated to Bass that he did not want Juhol to be killed. To the contrary, on the night

before he went to the police, he was urging Bass to “take her out” that night, telling him the door

was unlocked and Juhol had “no company.” So, while appellant reported the planned murder to

the police, he never countermanded his solicitation of it with Bass (or Bruno).

       In his brief, appellant argues he “withdrew from the conspiracy” by going to the Allen

Police Department and disclosing his “solicitation on Craigslist to have his wife deported, the

modification of the plan to kill his wife, and the subsequent events that led him to seek

assistance” from the police. But appellant was not charged with conspiracy; he was charged with

criminal solicitation. The renunciation defense under section 15.04(b) applies to two offenses,

criminal conspiracy under section 15.02 and criminal solicitation under section 15.03. It requires

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that “the actor countermanded his solicitation or withdrew from the conspiracy.” See TEX. PENAL

CODE ANN. § 15.04(b).       But only a person charged with solicitation may countermand a

solicitation and only a person charged with conspiracy can withdraw from a conspiracy.

Consequently, we agree with the State that it is no defense that appellant renounced a crime for

which he was not charged.

       Even if we were to conclude that appellant’s act in going to the police could constitute a

countermand of his solicitation, the defense still does not apply because appellant’s renunciation

was not voluntary. Under the statute, renunciation is not voluntary if it is motivated in whole or

in part (1) by circumstances not present or apparent at the inception of the actor’s course of

conduct that increase the probability of detection or apprehension or that make more difficult the

accomplishment of the objective; or (2) by a decision to postpone the criminal conduct until

another time or to transfer the criminal act to another but similar objective or victim. TEX.

PENAL CODE ANN. § 15.03(c).

       Appellant contends the two factors listed in subsection (c) are the exclusive means by

which a renunciation defense can be rendered involuntary and there is no evidence that his

renunciation was motivated by either circumstance.

       This Court, however, has interpreted subsection (c) to be nonexclusive descriptions of the

ways in which renunciation may not be voluntary. See Chennault v. State, 667 S.W.2d 299, 304

(Tex. App.—Dallas 1984, no pet.). Specifically, we have concluded the legislature did not

intend for a renunciation defense to apply where the intent to kill was still present; rather,

repentance or change of heart is required before renunciation is voluntary within the meaning of

the statute. Id. We reject appellant’s invitation to revisit our holding in Chennault.

       Here, the evidence showed appellant’s renunciation was not prompted by “repentence or

change of heart.” Rather, the evidence showed appellant went to the police out of self-interest,

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fearing he had become Bruno’s target. Just the night before, he urged Bass to get the job done

and encouraged him to come that night. The next morning, after receiving a threatening text

from “Bruno,” he went to the police. During the recorded interview, he repeatedly asked for

protection for himself and sought police intervention in his prescription fraud case, asking the

officer to contact his probation officer to excuse him from court-ordered rehabilitation. And

while he downplayed his responsibility when talking to the police, claiming he was involved

only because Bass threatened him and because he was trying to get more information, a jury

could have disbelieved him. Considering the evidence under the appropriate standard of review,

we conclude the evidence was legally and factually sufficient for a jury to reject appellant’s

affirmative defense of renunciation. We overrule the first and second issues.

       In his third issue, appellant contends the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to

support the trial court’s rejection of his renunciation mitigation issue at punishment.

       Evidence that a defendant renounced his criminal objective by countermanding his

solicitation before the criminal offense was committed and that he made a substantial effort to

prevent commission of the object offense is admissible as mitigation evidence at the punishment

phase of trial if he has been found guilty of criminal solicitation. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §

15.04(d). If the factfinder finds the defendant renounced his criminal objective, the punishment

shall be one grade lower than that provided for the offense committed. Id. Renunciation of an

inchoate offense under section 15.04(d) is a punishment-phase affirmative defense in which the

defendant has the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence. Hall v. State, 160 S.W.3d

24, 38–39 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).

       As before, the evidence supported the trial court’s rejection of the renunciation defense at

punishment because appellant did not renounce his solicitation of Juhol’s murder. As explained

previously, rather than attempt to revoke or recall the solicitation with Bass or Bruno, appellant

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in fact was still trying to convince Bass to carry out the murder up until the night before he went

to the police. And, even when he went to the police, he never contacted Bass and told him not to

kill Juhol. In other words, there was no evidence or factually insufficient evidence that appellant

countermanded his solicitation. Under these circumstances, we conclude there was legally and

factually sufficient evidence for the trial court to decline to make a finding of renunciation. We

overrule the third issue.

       In his fourth issue, appellant requests we correct three errors in the judgment regarding

the date of judgment, the statute, and the name of the offense. First, the judgment reflects

judgment was entered on May 7, 2014, which is the date the jury returned the verdict. But the

reporter’s record shows the trial court did not sentence appellant until June 11, 2014;

consequently, we agree June 11, 2014 is the correct date of judgment. Second, the judgment

shows the “Statute for Offense” as “19.03(a)(3) Penal Code,” which is capital murder for

remuneration. Appellant was not convicted of capital murder; rather, the record shows he was

convicted of criminal solicitation to commit capital murder under section 15.03(d)(1) of the

penal code. Consequently, the correct statute for the offense is section 15.03(d)(1).

       Third, appellant argues the judgment lists the incorrect offense for which he was

convicted, solicitation to commit capital murder for remuneration, and should be corrected to

criminal solicitation. Here, we disagree. The indictment alleged solicitation of capital murder

and the jury specifically convicted him of that offense. Consequently, we conclude the judgment

correctly identifies the offense.

       We have the authority to correct a judgment below to make the record “speak the truth”

when we have the necessary data and information to do so. Asberry v. State, 813 S.W.2d 526,

529 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1991, pet. ref’d). Accordingly, we modify the judgment to correct the

date judgment was entered and the statute for the offense of which appellant was convicted.

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       We affirm the judgment as modified.




                                                /Ada Brown/
                                                ADA BROWN
                                                JUSTICE

Do Not Publish
TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b)

140824F.U05




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                                       S
                              Court of Appeals
                       Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                      JUDGMENT

STEVEN LEE GORDON, Appellant                       On Appeal from the 219th Judicial District
                                                   Court, Collin County, Texas
No. 05-14-00824-CR        V.                       Trial Court Cause No. 219-81751-2013.
                                                   Opinion delivered by Justice Brown. Justices
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee                       Francis and Stoddart participating.

       Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, we REFORM the trial court’s judgment to
show (1) judgment was entered on June 11, 2014, and (2) appellant was convicted under section
15.03(d)(1) of the Texas Penal Code.

       As REFORMED, we AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment.


Judgment entered this 20th day of August, 2015.




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