Laevisuchus

[3][4] A 2024 revision of the small-bodied theropods from India classified Jubbulpuria tenuis as a junior synonym of Laevisuchus, and suggested that other taxa (Compsosuchus solus and Ornithomimoides?

[4] A partial right dentary RTMNU/DG/VERT/1/55P/2020, shares features with the noasaurid Masiakasaurus, and, while it wasn't formally referred to as Laevisuchus, it was suggested to come from it or a related form.

The vertebrae specifically resemble those of noasaurids like Masiakasaurus and Noasaurus due to having more anteriorly placed neural spines and posteriorly reduced epipophyses.

[5][6] The Jubbulpuria material was originally classified by Huene as another "coelurid" similar to but smaller than Coeluroides, another poorly known theropod from the Lameta Formation.

Later in 2024, Hendrickx et al. recovered Noasaurus in a polytomy with Laevisuchus, Masiakasaurus, Velocisaurus,and Vespersaurus, likely representing a radiation of small-bodied noasaurids that occurred during the Late Cretaceous.

Jubbulpuria vertebrae, now referred to Laevisuchus
Life restoration of Laevisuchus (lower right) with contemporary dinosaurs