Barry Demarlo Billingsley v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 2026
Docket25A-CR-01654
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Mathias

This text of Barry Demarlo Billingsley v. State of Indiana (Barry Demarlo Billingsley v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barry Demarlo Billingsley v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Apr 30 2026, 9:22 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana Barry D’Marlo Billingsley, Appellant-Defendant

v.

State of Indiana, Appellee-Plaintiff

April 30, 2026 Court of Appeals Case No. 25A-CR-1654 Appeal from the Lake Superior Court The Honorable Gina L. Jones, Judge Trial Court Cause No. 45G03-2110-MR-42

Opinion by Judge Mathias

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-1654 | April 30, 2026 Page 1 of 35 Judge May concurs. Judge Felix concurs in part and concurs in result with a separate opinion.

Mathias, Judge.

[1] Indiana Criminal Rule 4(C) places an affirmative duty on the State to bring a

criminal defendant to trial within an aggregate total of 365 days after the later of

the defendant being charged or arrested. Those days need not be consecutive

and, indeed, delays often happen due to the defendant’s own acts, which are

excluded from the 365-day rule. However, historically, our trial courts have not

been required to designate a delay on the record as attributable to one of the

parties, which left records unclear with respect to determining the remaining

days under Rule 4(C). That lack of clarity, coupled with the State’s affirmative

duty, frustrated Rule 4(C)’s purpose of furthering the speedy-trial rights of

defendants and made the accuracy of appellate review of Rule 4(C) decisions

difficult.

[2] Effective January 1, 2024, the Indiana Supreme Court amended the Indiana

Criminal Rules to include a new provision as Criminal Rule 4.1(A)(4). That

provision states: “When granting or ordering a continuance, the court must

designate whether the delay is excluded from the Rule 4 time period due to the

act of the defendant, court congestion, or emergency.” Ind. Criminal Rule

4.1(A)(4) (2024). And, by implication, if the trial court does not designate that

the delay is excluded, then the delay is not excluded. See id. Rule 4.1(A)(4) is

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-1654 | April 30, 2026 Page 2 of 35 intended to enhance the record’s clarity in the designation of delays by not

having those designations be determined in the first instance through Rule 4

filings made well after the fact of a delay. That clarity, in turn, enables the

parties to anticipate when key procedural events will occur or will need to

occur, such as preserving a motion for dismissal under Rule 4(C) for appellate

review, and furthers Rule 4’s essential purpose of giving effect to our

constitutional speedy-trial provisions.

[3] We thus conclude, as a matter of first impression, that Rule 4.1(A)(4)’s mandate

on our trial courts imposes a corresponding duty on the parties to timely object,

with a specifically stated ground, to the trial court’s designation of a delay

under that Rule in order to preserve appellate review over whether the court’s

designation was correct. A timely and specific objection provides the trial court

with the opportunity to cure any error and furthers Rule 4.1(A)(4)’s purpose of

ensuring that the record is clear, accurate, and can be relied upon going

forward. In the absence of such an objection, the correctness of the trial court’s

designation is not preserved for appellate review. We emphasize that the duty

to object to purportedly erroneous designations of delays in accordance with

Rule 4.1(A)(4) is about ensuring the correctness of the court’s records; it neither

alters the State’s affirmative duty to bring a defendant to trial within 365 days

under Rule 4(C), nor does it impose an obligation on the defendant to remind

the State or the court of the State’s duty.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-1654 | April 30, 2026 Page 3 of 35 [4] Here, Barry D’Marlo Billingsley appeals his conviction for murder. 1 Billingsley

raises two issues for our review, which we restate as follows:

1. Whether the trial court erred when it denied his Rule 4(C) motion for dismissal.

2. Whether the trial court abused its discretion in the admission of certain evidence.

[5] We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History [6] In October 2021, Billingsley was a long-term guest at the Fairbridge Inn

Express hotel in Merrillville. The Economy Inn of America hotel was across the

street from the Fairbridge Inn. Alantae Thornton and his girlfriend, Geni 2

Larcom, were long-term guests at the Economy Inn. Billingsley and Thornton

hung out together on an almost “daily” basis. Tr. Vol. 4, p. 12.

[7] Around 4:30 p.m. on October 2, Jamie McQuen, the Fairbridge Inn desk clerk,

observed Billingsley and Thornton walk past her toward Billingsley’s room. She

saw that Billingsley was wearing a black baseball cap, a blue denim jacket, and

white gym shoes. Not long afterward, Billingsley and Thornton left the

Fairbridge Inn and went to Thornton’s room at the Economy Inn.

1 Billingsley does not separately appeal the trial court’s finding that he committed the murder with a firearm. 2 The transcript shows her first name as Geni, but the parties use Gerri in their briefs.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-1654 | April 30, 2026 Page 4 of 35 [8] Around 5:15 p.m., Anthony Gibbs and his girlfriend, Janna Covelli, arrived at

the Fairbridge Inn and attempted to rent a room. McQuen denied them their

request. Gibbs and Covelli then went across the street to the Economy Inn to

attempt to rent a room there. Andy Tants, the desk clerk there, also denied

them their request.

[9] Shortly before 6:00 p.m., Magen Johnston pulled into the Economy Inn parking

lot and parked her car near Thornton’s room. Covelli approached Johnston and

began talking to her through Johnston’s car window. Within seconds, Thornton

and Larcom approached Covelli and Johnston. Larcom engaged in a scuffle

with Johnston at the car window, and Thornton pushed Larcom back away

from Johnston. State’s Ex. 24, File 2021OCT02163000_CH7_0, at 1:22:20 to

1:22:55.

[10] Gibbs and Billingsley then arrived at Johnston’s car. Thornton and Larcom left

the scene upon Billingsley’s arrival, and Billingsley began gesturing in the

direction of Gibbs and Covelli with his right hand, which was concealed in the

right pocket of his denim jacket. Id. at 1:23:07 to 1:23:18. Billingsley’s gestures

were suggestive of holding a firearm inside that pocket. Gibbs and Covelli

backed away from Billingsley and toward the Economy Inn laundry room.

Billingsley followed them, continuing his gestures. Id. at 1:23:18 to 1:23:44. In

the Economy Inn’s soundless surveillance footage of the scene, Billingsley then

suddenly turns and flees; Johnston suddenly speeds away; and Gibbs collapses.

Id. at 1:23:44 to 1:24:07.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-1654 | April 30, 2026 Page 5 of 35 [11] Across the street, McQuen heard “six or seven” gunshots coming from the

direction of the Economy Inn. Tr. Vol. 3, p. 216. She immediately ran across

the street “[t]o see if somebody needed help.” Id. Tants likewise left the front

desk of the Economy Inn and saw Gibbs “on the ground” near the laundry

room. Tr. Vol. 4, p. 5. Tants then called 9-1-1.

[12] Officers arrived on the scene shortly thereafter and observed that Gibbs was on

the ground with “a large pool of blood” under him. Tr. Vol. 3, p. 83. Gibbs had

been shot five times, including in the face and in the right leg. Covelli had been

shot in the foot.

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