PEOPLE
Man Convicted of Killing Girlfriend, Her Twin Sister and Her Brother-in-Law After Argument Over His Karaoke Machine
By Charna Flam and Clare Fisher Published on May 7, 2026 06:28AM EDT
A California man could face the death sentence following his recent murder conviction.
Eric Otto White, 63, was found guilty of the first-degree murders of his girlfriend, Kavina Madison Brooks, her twin sister, Kavona Kimberly Brooks-Lee, and her brother-in-law, Kenneth Lee. White was found guilty on April 30, according to court records obtained by PEOPLE.
A jury will recommend sentencing and the presiding judge, Cheryl Kersey, will either adopt the jury's recommendation or issue her own sentencee, KTLA reports.
Court records state that White fatally shot his girlfriend, her daughter, her sister, and her brother-in-law within minutes on Aug. 16, 2020, according to an initial criminal complaint obtained by PEOPLE.
He fatally shot Brooks and Lee and injured Brooks' daughter, Zanorra Brooks Killebrew, The Press-Enterprise reports. Brooks-Lee died after being hospitalized and placed on life support, according to Law and Crime.
White changed his clothes and fled to Las Vegas following the incident and several weeks later, he was located and arrested, the Redlands Police Department said in an August 2020 news release.
Brooks Killebrew, who was 14 years old at the time of the attack, testified during White's trial and claimed that the shooting occurred after Brooks touched White's karaoke speaker. She alleged that White disapproved of Brooks' “lenient” parenting style, per The Press-Enterprise.
Per the outlet, Brooks Killebrew also said in court that the day before the shooting, her mother told White he could move out and she would replace him with “someone else.”
During the trial, Deputy District Attorney Justin Crocker argued that White felt a "loss of control," leading to the shooting.
Meanwhile, per court testimony, White's attorney, James Rankin Gass, said his client was diagnosed with mental illnesses and had previously been treated at a psychiatric care facility. Gass argued for second-degree murder convictions due to White's mental health history.
Forensic and clinical psychologist John Matthew Fabian found that White had a schizoaffective disorder with a history of bipolar and depressive episodes. He claimed in court, as noted by the outlet, that at the time of the shooting, White was reportedly not taking his medication.
“Sad, but finally," Brooks-Lee's daughter, Alicia Sutton, said on learning of the conviction, The Mercury News reports.
PEOPLE reached out to the office of District Attorney Jason Anderson and White's attorney, James Gass.