State v. L. Barrus

2025 MT 183
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 2025
DocketDA 22-0662
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2025 MT 183 (State v. L. Barrus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. L. Barrus, 2025 MT 183 (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

08/19/2025

DA 22-0662 Case Number: DA 22-0662

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 183

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

LLOYD MORTIER BARRUS,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District, In and For the County of Broadwater, Cause No. CDC-2017-15 Honorable Kathy Seeley, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Colin M. Stephens, Stephens Brooke, P.C., Missoula, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Roy Brown, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Kevin Bratcher, Broadwater County Attorney, Daniel Guzynski, Stephanie Robles, Special Deputy County Attorneys, Townsend, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: June 11, 2025

Decided: August 19, 2025

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the court

¶1 Lloyd Mortier Barrus (Barrus) appeals from the March 15, 2022 Findings of Fact,

Conclusions of Law, and Order on Sentencing (Order) entered in the First Judicial District

Court, Broadwater County, which sentenced him to the custody of the Department of

Corrections (DOC) instead of to the Department of Public Health and Human Services

(DPHHS).

¶2 Barrus presents the following issue for review:

Whether the District Court abused its discretion by sentencing Barrus to DOC custody instead of DPHHS custody.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Barrus’s Background

¶3 In 2000, Barrus and one of his sons, Jeffrey, engaged in a shootout, high-speed

vehicle chase, and armed standoff with law enforcement in the Mojave Desert. Both

eventually surrendered and were charged with multiple felonies. Barrus was found unfit

to proceed to trial and diagnosed with Delusional Disorder. After the California court

ordered him to take antipsychotic medications, Barrus was eventually found fit to proceed.

He pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement and was incarcerated in California from

2002 until January 2013, when he was released on parole until the expiration of his sentence

in January 2016. Barrus maintained a clean criminal record from the expiration of his

parole until May 2017, when he was charged in the instant case.

¶4 Barrus’s other son, Marshall, relocated to Montana from Minnesota in 2016 with

his five children and their mother, Tara. He struggled to find stable employment and

2 housing, and was also awaiting trial on an unrelated felony burglary charge. In May 2017,

Barrus drove to Montana from his home in California to help Marshall find work in the

construction trade. Barrus stayed with the family1 at a campground near Canyon Ferry,

Montana, for about a week.

¶5 Tara would later report that Marshall’s anxiety and paranoia increased after Barrus

arrived. The father and son spent significant time at the campground sitting together in

Barrus’s Suburban and listening to “antigovernment talk shows” on the radio. On

approximately May 14, Barrus encouraged and shamed his son into drinking alcohol with

him, despite Marshall’s pretrial conditions requiring he abstain from alcohol. On May 15,

Barrus and Marshall left the campsite to travel to Gallatin County, Montana, in an effort to

obtain licensing for a hardwood flooring business. They returned inebriated to camp that

evening. Marshall proceeded to drink Tara’s bottle of wine while continuing to listen to

talk radio with Barrus. Tara drove Marshall into Townsend, Montana, to acquire more

alcohol.

¶6 Now, alone at the campsite with his grandchildren, Barrus spoke with one, telling

her she “was born into the militia” with “no way out of it[,]” she would “make a great lady

sniper[,]” and his belief that “all police should be hung[.]” He further warned her against

the “brainwashing” efforts of her schoolteachers. The grandchild would testify that Barrus

spent his time at the campsite listening to music and reading the Bible.

1 Only three of Marshall’s children were present at the campsite. His older two children lived independently elsewhere in Montana. 3 ¶7 When Marshall and Tara returned, they remained in their vehicle listening to “love

music.” Tara realized later that this was Marshall’s attempt to say goodbye. Marshall

asked his family to travel with him and his father to California. The family declined.

Marshall removed his SCRAM unit, which he wore to detect alcohol consumption as a

condition of his pretrial release, from his ankle and gave it to Tara. Barrus inspected Tara’s

phone and instructed her to delete “incriminating” text messages, which she did without

understanding why. Barrus laughed and waved Marshall’s 9 mm Glock handgun at Tara

from the driver’s seat of his Suburban. He claimed the two were about to embark on a

“suicide mission” and warned her that, if she joined, she would “get killed.” Barrus gave

Tara a signed and dated copy of his manifesto, “We the People or Them the Government[,]”

before driving himself and Marshall away from the campsite late on May 15, 2017.

Alarmed by Marshall and Barrus’s behavior, Tara texted Marshall asking what Barrus

meant by the statements “if we go, we die[?]” She moved the children into her vehicle and

locked the doors.

¶8 Barrus and Marshall travelled into Townsend, to purchase beer and gasoline after

midnight on May 16, 2017. The two returned to the campsite around 1:00 a.m. to retrieve

extra ammunition and other belongings. Marshall fired his .308 caliber M1A rifle into the

firepit at the campsite to get the attention of his family when he did not find them in their

tent. Discovering his family in Tara’s vehicle, Marshall broke a rear window of the car

with his elbow, injuring his son inside. For the last time, Marshall then asked his family

to come with him to California. They declined.

4 ¶9 Leaving the campsite for good, the two returned to the gas station in Townsend

shortly after 2:13 a.m. and from there headed South towards Three Forks, Montana. North

of Three Forks, the Suburban passed the patrol vehicle of Broadwater County Deputy

Sherrif Mason Moore (Deputy Moore) at a high-rate of speed. Deputy Moore activated his

lights and siren and began pursuing the Suburban. Barrus did not slow down and continued

driving, prompting Deputy Moore to alert dispatch that he was in pursuit of a vehicle

traveling faster than 100-mph.

¶10 When Barrus eventually slowed down, he seemingly did so to allow Deputy Moore

to come into range of Marshall’s rifle. From the rear of the Suburban, Marshall began

firing at Deputy Moore’s vehicle. At least one struck Deputy Moore, wounding him in the

face and causing him to lose control of his patrol vehicle. His vehicle came to a stop off

the highway. Barrus continued driving south. Deputy Moore’s dashcam recorded three

minutes of his labored breathing, his removal of his seatbelt, and his attempt to exit his

vehicle by opening the driver’s side door. Dashcam footage then captured the bright light

of the Suburban’s headlights returning, followed by a quick succession of rifle fire striking

the vehicle and Deputy Moore. The audio recording captured Marshall yelling as the

Suburban then fled the scene.

¶11 Dispatch issued an alert after losing contact with Deputy Moore. The responding

trooper found the patrol vehicle and radioed for medical assistance for a severely wounded

Deputy Moore.

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2025 MT 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-l-barrus-mont-2025.