Jamie Lynn Marks v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 545
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 12, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 545 (Jamie Lynn Marks v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Lynn Marks v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 545 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 545 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-24-718

JAMIE LYNN MARKS Opinion Delivered November 12, 2025 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 23CR-22-1243]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE TROY B. BRASWELL, APPELLEE JR., JUDGE

AFFIRMED

CASEY R. TUCKER, Judge

Jamie Lynn Marks appeals his convictions of committing a terroristic act and

possession of a firearm by certain persons in Faulkner County Circuit Court. He makes two

arguments on appeal: that the Faulkner County Circuit Court lacked jurisdiction because

the alleged crime occurred in Pulaski County and that the circuit court erred in denying his

motions to suppress. We affirm.

On December 14, 2022, Marcus McMillan was living in his camper on Marks’s

property at 57 Moody Road, which according to testimony, is in Faulkner County. In

addition to the camper, McMillan had a white truck and a black truck that he parked in the

yard. McMillan had been living in Marks’s yard for approximately three to six months. Marks

had asked McMillan to leave, but McMillan remained on the property. When McMillan returned home to his camper on the morning of December 14,

Marks fired at him and his truck with a shotgun. McMillan dialed 911 and told the

dispatcher that Marks had fired on him with “a shotgun or something” and that in addition

to his truck being hit, he was hit by glass or metal but that he was okay. The 911 operator

informed McMillan that she would have a deputy head his way. McMillan told the

dispatcher that Marks was headed his direction but no longer had a gun in his hand.

Investigator Nathan Nicodemus of the Faulkner County Sheriff’s Office responded

to the scene. He parked at a distance from the scene and approached slowly, taking cover

while doing so since he was responding to a shooting and the location of the shooter was

unknown. Nicodemus ultimately made contact with Marks, who had returned inside his

home. When Marks exited the home and did not appear to have a weapon, Officer

Nicodemus lowered his weapon. He then patted down Marks, who did not have any

weapons on him. Marks and Nicodemus had a short conversation in which Marks expressed

that he believed Nicodemus was there because he (Marks) had shot at someone in his front

yard. Marks told Nicodemus that he had shot at McMillan because he was living in his yard

and he wanted him gone. Nicodemus immediately took Marks into custody upon hearing

his comments. As Nicodemus was walking Marks to the patrol car, Marks spontaneously

commented, “It was just birdshot. It wouldn’t kill him. If it would, he would be laying in

the yard.” Nicodemus looked at the scene and inspected McMillan’s white truck, which had

small indentions consistent with birdshot on the passenger-side fender area, front, and hood.

2 Nicodemus testified that he and the officers who arrived after him searched the

property after obtaining a search warrant. In addition to other firearms found in Marks’s

main residence, the officers found a shotgun capable of firing birdshot lying on an oversized

chair in the living room. In a tub on the front porch, they found two spent shotgun shells.

In Marks’s barn, which was about fifty to sixty yards from his house, the officers found at

least three rifles hanging on walls in addition to other rifles and a shotgun. They also found

what appeared to be a “re-loading” room containing a set-up to load ammunition cases with

gunpowder and projectiles.

Corporal Brian Moody of the Faulkner County Sheriff’s Office is a patrol supervisor

who responded to the shooting call at 57 Moody Road. When he arrived, Nicodemus was

putting Marks in the car and Mirandizing him. Moody spoke with McMillan, who told him

that when he pulled up in his truck, Marks walked out of his house and fired two or three

rounds at him. Moody inspected the truck, which appeared to have been hit with birdshot.

On his way toward Marks’s house, Moody passed a gray Mazda truck that was backed up

toward Moody’s porch. Moody looked in the window of the truck and saw what appeared

to be a rifle lying on the seat. At that point, the officers stopped and waited for the Criminal

Investigation Division to come to the scene. Once the CID arrived with the warrant, Officer

Moody entered Marks’s home. In the bedroom, he found a holstered pistol lying in an open

area of a desk.

Investigator Nathan Kelley, who was the lead investigator on the case, arrived on the

scene after the other officers. Kelley spoke with McMillan and, upon inspecting the truck,

3 could tell it had been hit by birdshot. When he learned the nature of the incident and that

the suspect was in custody, he determined that he needed to obtain a search warrant. Kelley

had Investigator Michael Lee assist him in obtaining the search warrant, giving Lee

information for the affidavit for search warrant.

Lee helped execute the search warrant on 57 Moody Lane. He primarily searched

Marks’s barn, where he found a gun safe containing approximately fifteen to seventeen guns.

He also found the room in the barn containing three or four guns and ammo-manufacturing

equipment. The officers executing the search warrant found twenty-eight to twenty-nine

firearms on Marks’s property.

Marks was charged with simultaneous possession of drugs and firearms, committing

a terroristic act, and possession of a firearm by certain persons. The State later dismissed the

charge of possession of drugs and firearms and proceeded on the other two charges.

Marks moved to suppress physical evidence and statements, alleging that Marks was

arrested at his home without a warrant, forced from his home at gunpoint, and questioned

without the benefit of Miranda warnings. Marks urged that any evidence seized pursuant to

Marks’s warrantless arrest was subject to exclusion unless the warrantless seizure was justified

by probable cause and exigent circumstances. He further argued that law enforcement

obtained a search warrant on the basis of information that the officers obtained as the result

of his unlawful arrest. After a hearing, the court denied this motion to suppress.

Marks filed a second motion to suppress alleging that the evidence obtained

incidental to Marks’s arrest or seizure should be suppressed because the scope of the search

4 was beyond that permitted by Ark. R. Crim. P. 12.1 through 12.6 and because the

application for the search warrant was based on information obtained as a result of that

unlawful search. He further argued that the search warrant was obtained based on hearsay

and that the scope of the search was overbroad and lacked particularity of the places and

things to be searched. After a hearing, the court denied the motion to suppress.

The jury trial was held on April 18, 2024. The jury found Marks guilty on both

counts. It fixed Marks’s sentence at twenty-five years in the Arkansas Division of Correction

for possession of a firearm and fifteen years for terroristic threatening. The court sentenced

Marks accordingly, ordering that the sentences run consecutively for a total of forty years.

Marks timely appealed.

I. Jurisdiction of the Faulkner County Circuit Court

Appellant claims that the location of the offense for which he was tried was in Pulaski

County, and thus, that the Faulkner County Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction to hear

his case. We disagree.

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2025 Ark. App. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-lynn-marks-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.