The Guy Family Thanksgiving: Knoxville, Tenn., 2016
Twenty-eight-year-old Baton Rouge resident Joel Michael Guy, Jr. traveled from Baton Rouge, La., back home to Knoxville, Tenn., where he reunited with his three sisters and their parents over turkey and stuffing.
At the end of the evening, the three daughters—who all lived in Tennessee—returned to their homes, leaving Guy Jr. alone with his parents: Joel Guy Sr., 61, and Lisa Guy, 55.
That's when the violence erupted.
At some point between Thursday night and Monday afternoon, the Knox County Sheriff's department claims Guy Jr. stabbed and dismembered his parents, then attempted to dissolve their bodies in a mix of drain cleaner, sewer cleaner, hydrogen peroxide and bleach.
Guy Jr. was an undergraduate and still dependent on his parents for financial support. Family members told authorities that his parents intended to tell him of their plans to scale back support over the Thanksgiving weekend.
In 2020, Guy Jr., who had no history of mental illness and no prior criminal record, was found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, three counts of felony murder and two counts of abuse of a corpse for the brutal murders of his parents. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole and his 2023 appeal to overturn the conviction was denied.
Gelles says that shame around the money likely played a larger role in the killing than the money itself.
"The conversation had a lot more than, ‘We're not paying your phone bill,'" Gelles says. "I suspect there was a shaming component to it, and that triggered his behavior. If you dig into the psychology of family violence, the more common underlying psychological factor is shame."
The Mehari-Gebreselassie Family Thanksgiving: Oakland, Calif., 2006
Talk about trouble with in-laws.
A long-simmering tension between two Eritrean families joined by marriage ended with a triple murder and a sibling pair in prison for first-degree murder.
Asmerom and Tewodros Gebreselassie, 53 and 44, respectively, were convicted in the killing of their sister-in-law Winta Mehari, 28, her mother Regbe Bahrengasi, 50, and her brother Yonas Mehari, 17, at the Mehari Thanksgiving.
The brothers were two of 11 siblings who had immigrated to Oakland. They erroneously believed that Winta had killed her husband—their brother—Abraham Gebreselassie earlier in the year, to gain access to his $500,000 life-insurance policy. A pathologist determined that Abraham had died of natural causes.
Tewodros was invited to the Mehari Thanksgiving, from where he contacted Asmerom and opened the door for him into the apartment. He then kidnapped the Meharis' infant nephew while his brother gunned down the others.
The Merhige Family Thanksgiving: Jupiter, Fla., 2009
After dinner, they played Christmas songs around an old upright piano. Then came the carnage.
Among the dead: his 76-year-old aunt, Raymonde Joseph; his 33-year-old twin sisters Carla Merhige and Lisa Knight, who was pregnant; and 6-year-old Makayla Sitton, the daughter of his cousin, who was shot three times from her bed.
Merhige's presence at the dinner had been a surprise. He'd been estranged from his family for years, and at one point, one of his sisters put a restraining order against him. But, after purchasing more than $2,000 worth of guns and ammunition in the weeks before the holiday, he called his parents and asked to come to Thanksgiving.
"It came to my mind," replied the daughter. "But don't say that to Dad."
In 2011, Merhige pleaded guilty to all the murders and received a sentence of seven life terms. He avoided the death penalty with his plea deal.
Gelles says Merhige likely suffered from borderline-personality disorder, and that estranged family members who return to kill often do so after failing to move on independently: "The betting line is there's been a series of stressful events that led him to be estranged from his family. And if he came back with the intent of killing, it's because of his inability to self-soothe these grievances. Borderlines cannot self-soothe when their self-esteem has been attacked."
But for those left unsettled by the seemingly arbitrary nature of family killings, Gelles says they're not entirely random: Social isolation, low socio-economic status and youth all correlate with family violence.
"Either because life circumstances have changed, or the consequences do, but people tend to mature out of their violent behavior," Gelles says.