91Ƶ

Skip to content

Penticton man killed ex-wife91Ƶs 4 neighbours to stop them from 91Ƶbullying91Ƶ her

John Brittain pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and one count of second-degree murder
23003611_web1_18226451_web1_190417-PWN-Brittain-1200x800
John Brittain has pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and one count of second-degree murder in relation to the deaths of Darlene Knippelberg, Rudi Winter and Susan and Barry Wonch. (File)

What started as a squabble between Penticton neighbours ended in a rampage that saw four people lose their lives.

John Brittain pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and one count of second-degree murder in a Kelowna courtroom on Wednesday, Oct. 14, for killing four of his ex-wife Katherine Brittain91Ƶs neighbours 91Ƶ Susan and Barry Wonch, Rudi Winter and Darlene Knippelberg, all of whom were in their 60s and 70s 91Ƶ in April 2019.

Sentencing submissions commenced immediately after Brittain made his pleas and Crown spent much of the morning explaining the circumstances behind the broad-daylight shooting.

Following their 2012 separation, Crown counsel Colin Forsyth said Brittain and his ex-wife maintained a relationship. Brittain would often visit his wife in the home they formerly occupied together on Cornwall Drive, sometimes on a daily basis. Over time, the two developed issues with Katherine91Ƶs neighbours.

Katherine would often tell her husband of her grievances with her neighbours, including a tree being cut down, smoke pouring from a chimney towards her property and said she felt 91Ƶbullied91Ƶ by those living next door.

Over the years, those issues came to a tipping point on April 15, 2019.

Brittain spotted Winter outside his rental home that morning, which was located in downtown Penticton. Winter was helping a friend with some housework.

He loaded a gun, walked across the street and called out to Winter. As he was turning around, Brittain shot him five times 91Ƶ the last of which was to his head.

He then drove to Cornwall Drive, approached the garage door of the Wonch residence with another gun and knocked. Barry and Susan Wonch were inside. He shot both of them twice, Crown said.

Taking the same gun, he went to Knippelberg91Ƶs home, knocked on her door and shot her three times.

Brittain then drove to the Penticton RCMP detachment to turn himself in. He the woman working the front desk at the detachment that he was 91Ƶthe guy who just shot four people.91Ƶ

He told police he 91Ƶsnapped91Ƶ when he saw Winter outside his home after years of hearing his ex-wife complain about her neighbours 91Ƶ and realized he had the means to end it.

91ƵI destroyed a lot of people91Ƶs lives today,91Ƶ Forsyth said Brittain told an officer questioning him later that day, telling officers he did it to stop them from bothering Katherine.

Family members of the Wonches, Winter and Knippelberg took the stand on Wednesday, sharing heart-wrenching accounts of what they91Ƶve gone through in the past 18 months.

Renate Winter told the court in a victim impact statement that her 71-year-old husband was a humble, kind and hard-working person who died a brutal and violent death.

The couple91Ƶs daughter, Tanya Steele, said she heard shots on the morning of her father91Ƶs murder but had no idea he was the target.

91ƵHe took away my rock. He took away my sense of feeling safe,91Ƶ she said, sobbing.

At the end of her statement, Steele confronted Brittain directly with an accusation.

91ƵWe know (Katherine) made you do it, you should just man up and tell the truth,91Ƶ she said.

Brittain interjected, 91ƵKathy had nothing to do with this. You have no facts.91Ƶ

91ƵMy dad is dead, that91Ƶs the fact,91Ƶ Steele responded.

Brittain maintained that the murders were his decision alone.

91ƵI did it, 100 per cent. She wasn91Ƶt there,91Ƶ he told Mounties. 91ƵThey, for reasons of their own, could not stop picking on her.91Ƶ

Both first- and second-degree murder convictions carry a life sentence. A prisoner serving time for first-degree murder must wait 25 years before applying for parole and between 10 and 25 years for second-degree murder. The Crown is seeking terms before parole ineligibility to be served consecutively.

Sentencing continues Thursday.

READ MORE: Penticton quadruple murder trial moved to Kelowna

READ MORE: One year later after the tragic shooting spree in Penticton

Do you have something to add to this story, or something else we should report on? Email: michael.rodriguez@kelownacapnews.com



Like us on and follow us on .





(or

91Ƶ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }