American Homicide - S1: E18 – The Brotherhood, Part 1
Episode Date: February 13, 2025Genore Guillory lived on a dead-end country road in Clinton, Louisiana. Her gruesome murder shocked the small Louisiana town and exposed deep suspicions and tensions within the community. ...Reach out to the American Homicide team by emailing us: AmericanHomicidePod@gmail.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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One of the deputies went out to the residence and when he went inside,
he discovered the body.
The level of violence in this homicide was astonishing.
She'd been shot five times, stabbed deeply five times,
and vigorously beaten with an aluminum baseball bat.
When he exited the house, he actually threw up.
It was kind of crazy.
The murder of Genora Guillory sent shockwaves
through her small Louisiana town.
Everybody was scared, especially if you were a woman.
It was the summer of fear.
Today, we're in Clinton, Louisiana,
for the case of Genora Guillory, whose unsolved murder became
a talking point among local politicians.
I'm Sloane Glass, and this is American Homicide.
Just a warning, this episode contains some graphic content.
Please take care while listening.
Before we go into the story of Genora, we have to talk about Louisiana.
It's not trite to say that it really is a melting pot. A mix of so many different ingredients
that come together to create something
really unique and beautiful.
The food, the music, the environment,
the weather, it's thick in the air.
It actually reminds me of the dish
that they are best known for, gumbo.
Combination of different types of meat,
or seafood and celery, bell
peppers, onions, all coming together for this hearty stew.
Gumbo being one of the spicy, fantastic dishes of South Louisiana, Cajun land.
Albert Guillory is a lawyer and former state senator in Louisiana, where gumbo isn't just
the official dish, it's a culture.
We call ourselves gumbo people, a blend of French, French Catholic, particularly African,
and a lot of Native American. That blend of culture is what makes
Louisiana so unique. This is the most fascinating place in the world.
The most fantastic food, the best music,
and greatest dancing.
While cities like Baton Rouge and New Orleans
get the spotlight,
Albert believes it's the many small towns
that make up the fabric of the state.
We call ourselves the real Louisiana.
People are much warmer, much more open.
Our food is better.
Our music is better.
It's just a whole different world.
It's a much more integrated world in the country
than in the city.
One such integrated place is the town of Clinton.
Clinton sits about 30 miles northeast of Baton Rouge.
The rural community of about 1,200 residents dates back to the early 1800s.
Today its population is nearly split equally among black and white residents, but is still
working to overcome its racially-fraught history.
For years, residents argued over a giant, 30-foot statue
of a Confederate soldier that stands in downtown Clinton.
It's been there since the early 1900s.
And despite numerous efforts to remove
the controversial monument, it remains there today.
This is America.
There is racism in America, and that's just a part of life.
We've come a long way during my lifetime, and we still have a few more yards to go before
we reach the finish line.
Back in 2000, Elbert's sister-in-law, Genora Guillory, was living on a large 10-acre lot
in Clinton.
She lived down a country road.
There were only two residences on that country road.
She liked the fact that it was far out in the country.
Genora, or Miss G, as her neighbors called her, was a single career woman whose love
for the country was only surpassed by her affinity for animals.
She loved horses and had horses.
She loved dogs and had some dogs and particularly one.
Cleo was her absolute favorite and lived in her home with her.
They were very, very close.
Cleo was Genora's protector.
She would bark at almost anyone who came near her.
Genora used to joke that none of her outfits were complete
without Cleo's dog hair, or hair of any of the 20 or so dogs
she kept in a large kennel behind her home.
She loved the idea that she would be able to have her animals there in an undisturbed
fashion.
It was undisturbed alright.
Genora's farmhouse-style home sat on a huge parcel of land off a dead-end road.
In the distance were several tall trees and a cemetery.
It would be a scary place for anyone to live,
especially a single woman. Genora felt grateful to have neighbors living up the block.
There was a trailer about a half city block down across the little street,
little street and it was occupied by a family named Skipper. Mr. Skipper, his wife and their children. The Skippers trailer may have been an eyesore but
having Philip and his wife Amy Skipper as neighbors was a welcome sight for
Genora. She was a single career woman who lived alone. Her job in Baton Rouge
kept her away most of the day.
So she relied on the Skippers for help.
Mr. Skipper assisted with the animals,
who made sure that they were fed and received water
and those kinds of things.
Mrs. Skipper was employed by Janora as a housekeeper.
But it was more than a working relationship. The skippers and Jinora were very close, especially because Jinora depended on them for so much.
If she ever needed help at home, she knew she could rely on the skippers. You see, Jinora
was very successful.
She worked for a major insurance company
and would leave for work early in the morning
and return late at night.
But on the morning of Monday, June 26, 2000,
the lights in Jinora's Baton Rouge office were off
and her desk sat empty.
Her co-workers got worried about her because
she didn't show up for work. Detective Joel Odom worked for the East
Feliciana Sheriff's Department. They called the sheriff's office and asked to
do a check on her house and a welfare check. With no sign of Genora and a
constant busy signal on her landline phone. A patrol car was dispatched just after 10 a.m.
Clinton is pretty quiet.
It's a small community.
Most everybody knows everybody.
Not much goes on up there.
It took about 30 minutes for the squad car
to make it to Genora's home in Clinton.
When he first arrived there,
he saw that the door was open to the residents.
That's where Genora's dog Cleo was found tied to a railing near the carport.
Cleo was upset and barking.
She even tried to bite the officer as he quickly squeezed past her.
And when he went inside, he could see blood basically all over the living room, the phone,
the kitchen
Then they walked into the bedroom a broken lamp lay on the floor next to an overturned end table
Blood spatter covered the walls along with bullet holes above the bed and the body of Genora Guillory lay on the floor
She'd been shot five times stabbed deeply five times. It was awful. This
entire story gives me such a stomach ache and this is where the details get really hard.
Bruises covered her entire face. Janora's skull almost looked flattened by whatever was used to
hit her. She took a blow to the spinal column and severed it straight from the back of her neck.
You can imagine how much damage a blow like that would do.
If what happened to Janora Guillory
wasn't already bad enough,
there were also signs she was sexually assaulted.
It was a horrifying scene for a small town police officer or anyone for
that matter. This was a violent homicide probably more brutal than most homicides
you'll ever see. I believe when he exited the house he actually threw up.
Think about that for a second. The scene was so bad that it sickened the deputy.
We have murders up in Clinton, but nothing that was the level of this, it's heartbreaking.
Makes me feel sorry for the family to know their loved one had to go through something
like that.
Detective Don McKee arrived a short time later
and began to piece together what happened to Janora Guillory.
She was laying in the back corner of the bedroom.
She had stabs in her hand and her arms.
So you could see that she was trying to fight back.
It was just obvious that this was a homicide.
Detectives searched the house and they didn't find anything missing. They also didn't find any major clues.
At that point we secured the scene.
We called for Louisiana State Police, the crime lab, to come and process the scene.
While we was there waiting for that to occur,
we talked to the Skippers.
As Genora's body was taking out in a body bag,
her neighbors and good friends,
Philip and Amy Skipper, were standing outside.
A very pregnant Amy stood on the edge of the driveway
with her husband crying.
Amy was just really upset.
She was hysterical.
And they shook up.
I mean, they just couldn't understand why this would have happened to her.
Amy and Philip were two 20-somethings who lived in a mobile home with their children.
They explained to detectives that Genora, or Miss G as they called her, was the most generous person they had ever met.
Everybody was talking about how big of a heart she had. She would pick up stray
dogs and bring them to the vet and get them checked out and take care of them.
And the Skippers provided detectives with their first clue. They said Genora's
dogs never barked at night time.
However, the previous morning, they heard Genora's dogs barking around 2 a.m.
That's when we noticed scratches on both of their arms and then questioned them about it.
Philip Skipper's arms were all scratched up, but he had an explanation.
He said that he and his stepson, John Ballio,
had been horsing around in the yard.
He said it was rambling in the yard and so forth.
The Skippers were the only ones who lived nearby,
and those scratches were something
detectives couldn't ignore.
So in order to rule them out as suspects,
they had Philip Skipper and his stepson, John
Ballio, take a polygraph test.
They submitted to a polygraph test, and both of them passed that.
After they passed with flying colors, the detectives were back to square one.
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Genora lived in a nice house out in the middle of nowhere. I mean, it's,
it's down at the end of this gravel road.
Journalist Chuck Husmeyer covered the story.
Well, the door was open to the house. It wasn't forced, which, you know, it was a clue right there that she likely knew the killer.
Based on her autopsy,
the police determined
Genora died sometime in the very early hours
of Sunday morning.
And given the severity of her injuries
and the fact that nothing was taken from her home,
they wondered if Genora's killer may have held
some sort of grudge towards her.
Typically in a murder case, you start with the closest circle of people to the victim.
You know, husbands, wives, boyfriends, any kind of lovers, friends, things like that.
In this case, Jenora had had a boyfriend, a long-term boyfriend, but he had died.
Two years earlier, her boyfriend fell asleep at the wheel and
got into a fatal car accident. That left Genora devastated and alone. But after
that, it's really digging into the history of the victim. You know, who was
she? Who did she know? Who was mad at her? At the time, Janora was 42 years old. She worked in human resources for an insurance company in Baton Rouge.
Since she handled the hiring and firing, detectives questioned her coworkers to
see if there were any former disgruntled employees.
You know, people like that are who you want to check out first.
Her colleagues couldn't think of any disgruntled ex-employees,
but they did tell detectives about a suspicious male friend of Genora's. She had complained
to her co-workers that he was harassing her and he was very persistent. He would stake
out her car sometimes in the parking lot, catch her after work because she wasn't answering
his phone call. So he would go and, you know, visit her, so to speak, in person, although she didn't want it.
So he was a very viable candidate as a suspect.
That man was an old friend of Genora's named Steve.
They went on a date one time and he made her really uncomfortable.
Detective Joel Odom investigated and learned Genora met Steve in the 80s, but the two had
lost touch.
They'd recently reconnected, and just before her murder, they went out on a date.
But things quickly soured.
Genora wasn't interested in seeing him again.
But Steve wouldn't take no for an answer.
Genora said Steve wouldn't stop touching her.
She thought that was going to be the end of it,
but actually that was just the beginning.
He would call her at work multiple times
and they'd even heard him argue on the phone
and she had told him,
quit calling me, it'll work.
In the month before her murder,
Steve's phone number turned up
on Genora's home phone 11 times,
including Saturday, June 24th, hours before Genora's home phone 11 times, including Saturday, June 24, hours before Genora was murdered.
And then there was this.
The previous Friday, Genora told her colleague that she hoped Steve wouldn't show up at
her house that weekend.
That was the last time any of Genora's colleagues saw her alive.
So we started looking to him and found out he at the time was a Baton Rouge City police officer.
Everybody was just shocked.
Although he was 45 years old at the time, Steve was a rookie cop.
He had just graduated from the academy.
He spent the prior 20 plus years working as a corrections officer.
All of this, combined with his repeated, unwanted advances, made detectives suspicious.
So we felt he was a good suspect at the time, but it's hard.
As you can imagine, questioning one of their own requires a delicate dance.
There's no correct way to do it.
And I was a young detective back then.
I was kind of gullible.
I believed that the people that were supposed to take care of the people and the public
wouldn't lie to you or would not lie to the public.
No matter what, one cop investigating another cop means you're gonna step on some toes and
potentially cross some unspoken lines.
But that didn't stop them.
At the time, we didn't have anything.
Basically, we had a crime scene, no murder weapon, just phone records and other stuff
that we could develop.
Detectives continued to look into Steve.
He cooperated with their investigation.
We pulled him in for questioning,
and we offered him a polygraph at the time.
Steve agreed, and the results shocked everyone in the room.
He failed the polygraph, and he said,
I don't want to talk to you.
I want my lawyer.
And that was the end of the interview.
OK, so things weren't looking good for Officer Steve, and detectives continued to look for
anything that would connect him to the crime.
Journalist Chuck Husmeyer covered the story.
He left a message on her answering machine right before she died that he was going to
be in the area.
And of course, you're really not in that area unless you're going out there on purpose
But he claimed he was gonna be in the area and he would stop by
That's something important to remember
Genora lived in the middle of nowhere. So you really had to go out of your way to get to her house
But officer Steve had an alibi. He said that on the weekend of Genora's murder, he was at his mother's house.
And this part's surprising.
He was married at the time and even had a son, who he dropped off at a nearby camp.
He did admit to calling Genora that Saturday, but she told him she couldn't talk.
He called again the following day, but he said the line was busy.
He had made Genora nervous to the point where she wouldn't take his phone calls.
Detectives learned Steve sometimes stopped by Genora's house and office unannounced,
which obviously scared Genora. And get this, he even called Genora's colleague a couple days
after her death and asked for Genora's
parents' phone number.
There's just a lot of weird stuff going on with this guy.
Things got even more unsettling when they visited the police academy Officer Steve attended.
There was a payphone there where fellow cadets said they always saw Steve making calls.
Detectives got a phone log from that payphone
and found 35 phone calls placed from that phone
to Genora's Baton Rouge office.
Who do you call when the police are the ones harassing you?
They interviewed people that he knew,
including another woman who was in the police academy with him,
who said he kind of harassed her. So, you
know, this guy's got kind of a history of harassing women that don't return his affections.
Even after Steve lawyered up and stopped cooperating, detectives continued to turn up the heat.
And they really went after him hard. They executed a search warrant on his house, on
his car, and they didn't find anything. They couldn't link him to the crime.
So this had to be frustrating for detectives.
They now had plenty of circumstantial evidence, but nothing concrete.
Officer Steve failed his polygraph.
He admitted to phoning Genora multiple times a day.
And he admitted to even showing up at Genora's office
unannounced.
But all of that wasn't enough to press charges.
Can't charge anybody without evidence,
so they just have to either dig up another lead
or wait for some kind of a break to come your way.
While detectives continue their investigation,
Genora's brother-in-law, Albert, struggled to stay positive.
Here's Albert.
That was not an easy time, not at all.
At the time of Genora's murder, the police
had lifted some DNA from under her fingernails.
But keep in mind, it was still the early days of DNA testing.
And the testing was not only expensive, but slow. It was the
year 2000. It took months for the labs to process it. There were some missteps and
some broken leads, as there are in many investigations, but it would be difficult
for all of us. It required a good deal of patience on all sides.
We did everything that we could to be helpful to law enforcement.
Families under these emotional, devastating circumstances
can sometimes get underfoot.
They want to try the case in the press and all of that.
That was not something that we would do and we did not do. to try the case in the press and all of that.
That was not something that we would do and we did not do.
Albert and Genora's family weren't the only ones losing patients.
Law enforcement was also disappointed with how long it took the labs to process that DNA.
But one arrest, one year later, would about everything. And you're right there with them.
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But a lot of that was just because I wasn't good at anything else, you know?
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I mean, it's a very small town, small population,
and a very rural area.
Chuck Husmeyer authored the book Unspeakable Violence
about Genora's murder.
I've been around a lot of crime, you know,
but this one was just particularly bad.
The police investigated a rookie cop out of Baton Rouge,
who some said was stalking Genora.
But they just didn't have enough evidence to charge him.
They polygraphed him, and he seemed a little shady on the polygraph, but nothing definitive.
And there's just no evidence. So the case went cold.
Cold. Something family and friends never want to hear when describing the case of cold. Cold. Something family and friends never
want to hear when describing the case of a loved one.
For Elbert and Genora's community,
it felt like an answer to her murder would never come.
And then, a year later, the investigators
got a break when a man named Donnie Fisher was arrested.
Donnie was brought in for beating up his girlfriend.
Detectives had no connection to him and Genora, but Donnie was hoping to trade some information
to get himself off the hook.
He said he knew something about the Genora Guillory murder.
He said he was talking to a guy and that guy was bragging about having killed this black
woman in Clinton, Louisiana.
So they started digging into his story.
That's when detectives learned about a local makeshift gang called the Brotherhood.
The Brotherhood was, you know, three, four, maybe five guys with a tattoo.
They stole the idea from a cheesy B-action movie.
If you've seen the 90s movie Stone Cold,
and not too many people have,
you may have heard of the Brotherhood.
The Brotherhood was a biker gang
that was featured in the movie,
but the Brotherhood and Clinton operated a bit differently.
They were selling meth, they were fighting pit bulls,
they were committing grave robbery, they were fighting pit bulls, they were committing grave robbery,
they were literally pulling gold teeth out of people's mouths that they dug up from graves.
I mean, you gotta have something really wrong in your head to decide that the best way you
can earn some money is to go dig up graves and steal their teeth and jewelry.
I mean, that's something really screwy in your head there. And members of this dog-fighting, meth-selling, and grave-robbing gang sported tattoos with
the letters GFBD.
GFBD. God forgives, brotherhood doesn't.
That tattoo was a sort of membership badge. But you had to earn it.
And the only way to earn it was to kill somebody.
So who was part of this gang? Well, according to Donnie Fisher, the brotherhood consisted
of Philip Skipper, Genora's neighbor, and his brother-in-law, Johnny Hoyt.
But there's no evidence of animosity between the Skippers and Genore.
The person who fed this information to Donnie Fisher was his friend, John Ballio.
You may remember lived with the Skippers.
John Ballio was sort of an orphaned kid.
His mother just sort of left him with Phillip Skipper and Amy Skipper.
They referred to him as their stepson, but he really wasn't any kind of relation to
them.
John Ballio would have just been 15 years old at the time of the murder.
Early on in their investigation, detectives noticed that John Ballio and his stepfather,
Philip Skipper, had a bunch of scratches on their arms and face.
But both of them passed a polygraph test.
So the detectives went back to question the teenager
about the Brotherhood's connection to Genora's murder.
And, you know, of course,
John Ballio denied that he participated in it,
but he was there.
John Ballio said he was there the night Genora was murdered, but he pinned the blame on his
stepfather, Philip Skipper, along with Philip's sister Lisa and her husband, Johnny Hoyt.
John Ballio said Lisa shot her a couple times, Philip here with a bat, and that's what killed
her.
John Ballio said all he did that night
was control Genora's dog, Cleo.
John Ballio's job was to get a rope around the dog's neck.
The dog was a chow, and it was sort of vicious,
and Genora let that dog sleep in the house with him
because it was her protector.
Ballio said it was all part of his initiation
into the Brotherhood.
Okay, so there's a lot to unpack here.
Philip Skipper and John Ballyo passed a polygraph test right after Genora's murder, which
originally eliminated them as suspects.
Here's how they did it.
Both of them popped some pills before the test to bring their heart rate down.
But still, none of this added up. Why would Philip Skipper want to hurt Jinora?
She was extremely generous to them. Whenever they would come ask her for anything, which they did a lot, she would give it to them.
She threw a birthday party at a local restaurant for their baby. She actually gave them enough money
to help them buy a newer mobile home,
not a new one, but newer and nicer.
As the police investigated,
they learned that a month before DeNora's murder,
the two neighbors had an argument.
The relationship between DeNora Guillory and the Skippers
started to deteriorate over this
incident involving a goat.
It's a weird story, but the Skippers had a pet goat.
Why?
I have no idea.
Somehow the goat got loose and Amy Skipper said that one of Genoa's dogs attacked a goat. Amy Skipper called Genora at work just cussing at her
and just angry, furious about the goat.
It turned out it wasn't really one of Genora's dogs.
It was a dog, I think, that the Skippers had
and gave to Genora that got loose.
So in other words, the Skipper's own dog attacked their goat.
But they blamed Genoa.
The skipper said the two sides had reconciled.
But again, would an incident with a goat
be enough of a motive to kill?
It seems a little ridiculous.
They did get a search warrant based on what he told them and they executed the warrant
at the trailer across from Genora's house.
Now keep in mind, this search happened well over a year after Genora's murder.
They weren't really able to find anything in the house.
They couldn't find the gun, you know, the 22 gun that she was shot with several times.
And they did find a bat.
John Ballio had told them about a bat, but the bat had been sitting outside their trailer
for like two years in the rain.
So they weren't able to get any evidence, DNA evidence particularly.
One other notable find at the Skippers was some life insurance documents. It was a life policy that named the Skippers as the
beneficiary in the event of Genora's death.
Her boyfriend was the beneficiary on the life
insurance policy on Genora's life.
And when he passed away, she didn't cancel the policy.
She saw her neighbors were in financial straits.
So she just named Philip and Amy Skipper
as the beneficiaries of the same $25,000 insurance policy.
And she figured if something happened to her,
they would have some extra money
to help take care of their baby.
Well, that's certainly curious, but it wasn't a secret.
Albert Guillory knew about the life insurance policy,
and no one had objected. Philip and Amy definitely knew about the life insurance policy and no one had
objected. Philip and Amy definitely knew about the insurance policy. Genoa told
them about it. So all of a sudden the attention shifted to the Skippers and
John Ballio who lived right across the street from Genoa-Giller. Even with these
suspects and a confession, the police still did not think they had enough
evidence to charge them.
Just like with their other suspect, the cop from Baton Rouge.
Most prosecutors are extremely risk averse.
They won't tee it up and see what the jury says.
They will just drop the case rather than press forward on what they
consider a weak case. The decision not to press charges created a war between
the DA and Sheriff's Office. So we just kind of had to sit back and look at
everybody again. And the unsolved murder left the town of Clinton terrified. It
was the summer of fear.
Everybody was buying mace off the shelf
as fast as they could get it here.
Handgun sales were through the roof.
I'm Sloane Glass.
In the conclusion of The Brotherhood,
the police learned the surprising answer
to why they couldn't find more evidence.
You never have that happen. And that's something I would be embarrassed to try to write in fiction.
But in this case, it really happened.
That's next time on American Homicide team by emailing us at americanhomicidepodatgmail.com.
That's americanhomicidepodatgmail.com.
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