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Murders of Joel and Lisa Guy

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2016 Parental murders in Knoxville, Tennessee, US
Lisa Guy (left) and Joel Guy looking at each other affectionately against a natural backdrop
Lisa Guy (left) and Joel Guy

On November 26, 2016, 61-year-old Joel Guy Sr. and 55-year-old Lisa Guy were murdered and dismembered by their son, 28-year-old Joel Michael Guy Jr., in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. Guy Jr. stabbed his father at least 42 times; his mother at least 31 times. He was convicted of both murders in October 2020 and received a sentence of life imprisonment.

Guy Jr.'s parents were soon to retire and would stop providing money to their son; he was to receive a $500,000 life insurance policy if both were dead or missing. The murder involved an elaborate plot to stab both parents, dismember and dissolve their remains, clean and burn down some of the house, as well as frame the father for the crime. Guy Jr. was injured during the stabbing and left the partially dissolved remains in the house when he left to dress his wounds. Before he returned, police discovered the bloody scene upon performing a welfare check by a coworker that had called after noticing Lisa was missing. They also discovered a backpack containing a notebook detailing the plan; plastic bins with both parents' torsos and dismembered limbs dissolving in an acid-based solution of corrosive chemicals described by prosecutors as a "diabolical stew of human remains"; the father's severed hands on the floor, and the mother's head in a pot on the stove which had been boiling for over a day at the time of discovery.

Background

Joel Guy Jr.
BornJoel Michael Guy Jr.
(1988-03-13) March 13, 1988 (age 36)
Conviction(s)
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Date apprehendedNovember 29, 2016

Joel Michael Guy Sr. (February 10, 1955 – November 26, 2016) was a pipeline engineering designer. Lisa Guy (née Madere; August 8, 1961 – November 26, 2016) was a human resources accounts payable administrator at Jacobs Engineering in Oak Ridge.

Their son, Joel Michael Guy Jr. (b. 1988), graduated from the Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts in Natchitoches in 2006, and previously attended Hahnville High School. He had never worked and had always been supported by his family. Guy Jr. was described by others as distant and an outsider, and never bothered to establish a relationship with anyone in or outside his family, while his mother doted on him. He spent one semester at George Washington University, then attended Louisiana State University as a student and lived in Baton Rouge until the murders in 2016, ostensibly training to become a plastic surgeon.

The Guys had recently sold their Knoxville house, and planned to retire to Surgoinsville. Guy Jr. and his three half-sisters attended what was to be the last event at the Knoxville house, Thanksgiving, on Thursday, November 24, 2016.

Planning

Book of Premeditation

The prosecution at his trial dubbed the handwritten journal found in Guy Jr.'s backpack the "book of premeditation", as it contained detailed notes outlining his intent to murder and destroy the remains of his parents.

One page includes the following:

                                                                   

  • Get killing knives - quiet - multiple         *get carving knives to make small pieces
  • Get sledgehammer - crush bones
  • Bring blender and food grinder - grind meat
  • get bleach - denature proteins
  • get plastic bin for denaturation process
  • does not matter where they're killed
just get rid of bloody spots to prevent
evidence of time of death (not the mattress or couches)
  • get rid of bodies inside house - their and my DNA already there
  • open up doggie door to provide entryway        he needs to be blamed, not intruder
  • flush chunks down toilet (not garbage disposal)
  • get plastic sheeting for disposal process
  • get hollow point bullets just in case will be seen buying bullets; just use computer room gun →

      check to make sure there are bullets (last resort

  • He's not alive to claim her half of the insurance money → all mine ($500,000)
  • flood the house, covers up forensic evidence
  • turn heater up as high as it goes → speeds decomposition.
  • bleach reacts with luminol just like blood → douse area with bleach
  • big sprayer
  • lye
  • trash compactor?

      Body gives times of death → alibi

  • Don't have to get rid of body if there is no forensic evidence on the body.
  • HIS FINGERPRINTS AND DNA

Surveillance footage

Guy Jr. was caught on several surveillance cameras buying the supplies he would later use to murder and try to dissolve his parents. He used cash for every transaction, and self-checkout most of the time. He bought supplies for the murder as early as November 7, purchasing several items at an Ace Hardware in Napoleonville, including muriatic acid and food-grade hydrogen peroxide. On November 18 at Home Depot, cameras recorded him buying the bleach sprayer, extension cords, and a timer. At Academy Sports on November 19, he was seen buying a knife. On November 21, cameras captured Guy Jr. at a Knoxville Walmart buying blue totes.

Lisa Guy was also seen on surveillance footage shortly before her murder, buying items at Walmart at approximately 12:15 PM.

Murders

Joel Guy Sr.

On November 26, Guy Jr. attacked and killed his father with a knife in a second floor exercise room while his mother was out shopping for groceries at Walmart. The scene showed evidence of a struggle, with torn blinds, blood on the wall and corner, and an overturned Bowflex machine.

Lisa Guy

Upon arriving home, Lisa Guy entered through the front door, dropped the groceries on the floor of the foyer, proceeded upstairs, was attacked, then killed with a knife. Nine of her ribs were severed.

Dismemberment

Guy Sr.'s hands were removed at the wrists and left nearby on the exercise room floor. Lisa's head was removed, carried downstairs, placed in a pot on the stove and heated. At trial, the forensic examiner testified the head was not just severed but broken off with force. Both victims also had their arms and legs disarticulated, Guy Sr. at the waist and Lisa at the knees, and their limbs and torsos were placed in a bin full of chemicals to dissolve. Each body had a large gash inflicted after death so that the chemicals would more quickly seep into the body's main cavity.

Cuts to perpetrator

In the assault on his father, Guy Jr. sustained several cuts to his hands, including a deep cut to his left thumb. At approximately 3:30 PM, Guy Jr. was seen in Walmart's first aid section, obtaining bandages and ointment for the wounds to his hands. He also purchased isopropyl alcohol and hydrogen peroxide.

On Sunday, Guy Jr. drove back to Baton Rouge to have his wounds treated at the student clinic.

Investigation

Lisa's boss, Jennifer Whited, was suspicious of her absence from work and called police for a welfare check.

Welfare check

At first, Knox County officers Steven Ballard and Jeremy McCord and others found a seemingly empty house on Goldenview Lane. The property was for sale, yet there was no real-estate lock on the front door. They soon discovered the back door doorknob had been removed and installed on the front door. Through the front door, they could see groceries on the floor, including perishable items such as bacon, sausage and ice cream. Through the hole left by the missing back doorknob, they could sense heat and a strange smell emanating from the house, and from another angle, they could see the groceries. An officer used a garage door opener in one of the Guys' cars to gain access to the house.

They first discovered a table with the Guys' wallets and a sledgehammer on top, and then another with long guns. Downstairs, the stove was on and the contents of a pot were boiling. At the bottom of the stairs were the grocery items seen earlier. They ascended the stairs, hearing an intermittently barking dog. They looked down a hallway, saw Joel Guy Sr.'s severed hands on the floor, and discovered the dismembered corpses in solution in a bathroom.

Among other items investigators found at the home were sewer line cleaner, a bag of baking soda, drain opener, a bottle of muriatic acid, lye, hydrogen peroxide, several bottles of bleach, a spray bottle, a pair of gloves and trash bags. Investigators also discovered a note in an open suitcase with the name and an address of a Louisiana Ace Hardware store, along with a notation about sewer line cleaner.

The toxins required bio-hazard equipment for removal by the Knox County Sheriff's Office Hazmat Team. Due to the volume of evidence found, KCSO's Forensics Unit worked throughout Monday night and into the following day processing the crime scene.

Apprehension of suspect

The FBI, Knox County Sheriff's Office and East Baton Rouge Sheriff's Office placed Guy Jr. under surveillance for a few days and apprehended him on November 29 as he was entering his 2006 Hyundai Sonata in the Nicholson Drive apartment complex parking lot in Baton Rouge.

A meat grinder was discovered in the trunk of Guy Jr.'s car.

Trial

Guy Jr. pled not guilty, yet filed a motion that he be given the death penalty if convicted. Guy Jr.'s defense counsel, John Halstead and Jonathan Harwell, presented no evidence on his behalf. The prosecution was led by Leslie Nassios and Hector Sanchez.

The trial took four days. Guy Jr. was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison. He was also convicted of abuse of a corpse.

In 2023, an appeal to overturn the sentence of Guy Jr. was denied.

Joel Michael Guy Jr. is currently incarcerated at the Northwest Correctional Complex in Tiptonville, Tennessee.

References

  1. ^ "Joel Guy - Obituary". www.legacy.com.
  2. ^ Harris, Alivia (September 28, 2020). "Knox Co. parents found dissolving in 'diabolical stew of human remains,' investigators say". wvlt.tv.
  3. ^ "Joel Guy Jr. Found Guilty of Murdering and Dismembering Parents Just After Thanksgiving in 2016". October 2, 2020.
  4. "Joel Guy Jr accused of murdering parents, dismembering corpses". September 28, 2020.
  5. Mettler, Katie. "He was fine at Thanksgiving, his sisters said. But now he is accused of dismembering their parents" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  6. ^ "Defense can challenge use of evidence against man accused of dismembering parents". wbir.com. December 3, 2019.
  7. Gyan, Joe (December 16, 2016). "Baton Rouge man accused of dismembering parents in Tennessee gets new hearing date following transport glitch". The Advocate.
  8. Sadler, Megan (September 29, 2020). "Who is Joel Guy Jr.?". wvlt.tv.
  9. Sadler, Megan (October 2020). ""I think about you all the time:" Joel Guy Jr. contacts best friend from jail". www.wvlt.tv.
  10. Satterfield, Jamie. "Did a son kill his parents for cutting him off financially? Knox County jury will decide". Knoxville News Sentinel.
  11. Smith, Rain (November 29, 2016). "Kingsport native and wife brutally murdered; son arrested". timesnews.net.
  12. ^ Writer, Bill Jones Staff (December 2016). "SON CHARGED IN HORIFFIC MURDER, DISMEMBERMENT OF PARENTS; Knox couple was planning to move to Surgoinsville". The Rogersville Review.
  13. Oliveira, Nelson (October 6, 2020). "Jury convicts man who dismembered own parents, dissolved their limbs with acid in 'diabolical stew of human remains'". nydailynews.com.
  14. "'Get killing knives' Disturbing lists found in Joel Guy Jr's notebook detail parents murder – News Science".
  15. "Man guilty of brutal slayings, dismemberment of parents". Court TV.
  16. ^ Harris, Alivia; Sadler, Megan; Bohle, Ashley (September 29, 2020). "'I will never get those smells out of my head:' First responder recalls what he found at Knox County house of horror". wvlt.tv.
  17. ^ "'I've waited a long time for this' || Joel Guy Jr. guilty of murdering, dismembering parents in 2016". wbir.com. October 2, 2020.
  18. "Judge allows use of some evidence in dismemberment murder case; other requests pending". wbir.com. November 21, 2019.
  19. ^ Desk, Crystal Bonvillian, Cox Media Group National Content (October 13, 2020). "'Diabolical stew of human remains': Graphic details mark start of man's trial in parents' 2016 murders". WHBQ. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. Gyan, Joe (January 5, 2017). "New info revealed in warrant for Baton Rouge man accused of dismembering parents in Tennessee". The Advocate.
  21. ^ Desk, Crystal Bonvillian, Cox Media Group National Content (September 29, 2020). "'Diabolical stew of human remains': Graphic details mark start of man's trial in parents' 2016 murders". WFXT. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  22. "Man charged with killing, dismembering parents after Thanksgiving". ABC7 Chicago. December 1, 2016.
  23. Satterfield, Jamie. "Joel Guy Jr. asks to be put to death in his parents' murders, but state won't pursue it". Knoxville News Sentinel.
  24. "Man who 'murdered parents, cut up their bodies' gives permission for death penalty if convicted". 7NEWS.com.au. September 20, 2020.
  25. Satterfield, Jamie. "Joel Guy Jr. convicted of killing and dismembering his parents". Knoxville News Sentinel.
  26. "Joel Guy Jr. sentenced to life in prison for murder, dismemberment of parents in 2016 slayings at Knox County home". October 2, 2020.
  27. "Already Sentenced to Life, 'Sick and Depraved' Murderer Gets 4 More Years in Prison for Dismembering Parents". November 19, 2020.
  28. "Joel Guy Jr. loses his longshot appeal after he was convicted in his parents' murders".
  29. "Department of Correction".
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