THE 142-DEGREE DEATH TURN: The One Detail The “Tragedy” Defense Can’t Explain 🛑
“I am a driver in a tragedy,” she whispered. The camera zoomed in on her tear-filled eyes. To the millions watching the newly released documentary, 21-year-old Mackenzie Shirilla looks like a broken, traumatized young woman who just wants the world to understand.

But as a veteran crime reporter, I don’t look at the tears. I look at the telemetry. And the data pulled from the twisted metal of her Toyota Camry tells a story straight out of a horror movie.
🎭 The “Blackout” Alibi
During her highly publicized prison interview, Shirilla’s defense leaned heavily on a medical condition known as POTS (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome). Her narrative is simple and tragic: she passed out. She claims her body went limp, her foot slipped heavily onto the gas pedal, and she remembers absolutely nothing until waking up in the hospital.
It’s the perfect, untouchable defense. A medical mystery. An uncontrollable tragedy.
Until you read the black box report.

⏱️ The 4.6 Seconds of Terror
Cars don’t have emotions, but they do have perfect memories. The Event Data Recorder (EDR) inside her Camry captured the final 4.6 seconds before the devastating 100mph impact that took the lives of Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan.
Here is what the machine recorded while Mackenzie was supposedly “unconscious”:
The Lethal Force: The gas pedal was pinned to the floorboard at exactly 100% capacity. Forensic experts confirm this wasn’t a limp foot resting on a pedal; this required continuous, forceful, physical pressure.
The Silent Brakes: The brake pedal was touched zero times. Not a single tap.
A Desperate Fight in the Cabin: In the final 4.7 seconds, the transmission was violently thrown back and forth between Drive, Sequential, and Neutral. Former investigators believe this points to a terrifying reality: someone in that passenger seat woke up to the nightmare and fought desperately to stop the car before it was too late.
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🛑 The Smoking Gun: The 142-Degree Yank
But the single most chilling detail—the one her defenders conveniently ignore—is the steering.
Seconds before the f*tal impact, the EDR recorded a deliberate, 142-degree hard yank on the steering wheel. The car didn’t drift off the road. It didn’t swerve to avoid an obstacle. It was intentionally aimed directly at the thickest, most unyielding part of the brick wall.
Medical experts are crystal clear on this fact: when a person suffers from a fainting episode, their muscles lose tension. They go flaccid. An unconscious driver does not execute a precise, forceful 142-degree steering maneuver. Only a conscious, calculating mind does that.

👁️ The Verdict of the Machine
When you overlay the chilling CCTV footage of that vehicle transforming into a high-speed missile with the quiet, tearful girl on your screen, a dark psychological disconnect emerges. Body language experts have picked apart her recent interview, noting the terrifying lack of genuine distress when discussing the victims, replaced by perfectly timed, rehearsed micro-expressions.
“I am not a monster,” she says. But the digital footprint she left behind on that July morning is terrifyingly cold-blooded.
The machine doesn’t cry for the cameras. It just remembers the truth. And the truth is, this wasn’t a blackout. It was a countdown.
👉 Did the documentary manipulate you? See the unedited CCTV footage and the full forensic breakdown that exposes the ultimate lie. Click the link in the comments below! 👇
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Mackenzie Shirilla Said in Jail Call, ‘I Want Kim Kardashian to Be My Lawyer’ (Exclusive)
“Tell her I buy all her SKIMS and I only wear SKIMS,” the convicted murderer, 21, says during the call, referencing Kardashian’s shapewear brand
NEED TO KNOW
In an undated jail call obtained by PEOPLE, Mackenzie Shirilla expressed hope that Kim Kardashian might legally represent her if she saw media coverage of her case
Convicted of murder, Shirilla, 21, is serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life for purposefully causing a crash in 2022 that killed her boyfriend and a friend
Kardashian advocates for those she believes have been wrongfully convicted, as well as incarcerated people who have demonstrated rehabilitation
In an undated jailhouse call obtained by PEOPLE, Mackenzie Shirilla, convicted of murdering her boyfriend and their friend in a car crash, said she wants Kim Kardashian to be her attorney.
During the call from the Cuyahoga County Corrections Center in Ohio, Shirilla and another person on the line — who is not identified in the call — discussed the media attention surrounding her case, including a reference to an interview with the father of Shirilla’s slain boyfriend, Dominic Russo, published in the Daily Mail.
Mackenzie then suggests the reality star — who has been actively pursuing a legal career for several years but has not yet passed the California bar exam — may have seen the news coverage. Kardashian, 45, advocates for those she believes have been wrongfully convicted, as well as incarcerated people who have demonstrated rehabilitation.
“Well maybe Kim Kardashian’s seen,” Mackenzie says.
The other person agrees, adding, “Yeah, maybe Kim will, now that it’s, like, all over. I was like, I mean, that’s the only thing that might be good about the whole media thing. Maybe Kim will see it.”
Mackenzie then expresses her hope for legal representation from the SKIMS mogul. “I don’t know. You have to figure out because I’m real nervous and I want Kim Kardashian to be my lawyer,” Mackenzie says.
The conversation later turns to Kardashian’s work in criminal justice reform, with the other person noting she “works hard” to help “innocent people get out of jail.”
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Fellow Inmate Explains Why Mackenzie Shirilla Reminded Her of Regina George Character (Exclusive)
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As the call continues, the other person says, “We’re gonna have her get you out,” prompting Mackenzie to add, referring to the shapewear brand, “Tell her I buy all her SKIMS and I only wear SKIMS.”
Mackenzie, 21, is now serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life at the Ohio Reformatory for Women.
She was convicted in August 2023 of murder, aggravated vehicular homicide and other charges connected to the July 2022 deaths of 20-year-old Russo and the couple’s friend, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan.
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Dominic Russo; Davion Flanagan.GoFundMe; Jardine Funeral Home
Prosecutors argued during her bench trial that she intentionally drove her sedan into a brick wall in Strongsville, Ohio, at nearly 100 mph after her relationship with Russo had become strained. The judge described her in court as “literal hell on wheels.”
Interest in Mackenzie’s case has resurfaced following the May 15 release of the Netflix documentary The Crash, which features interviews with Mackenzie’s family, the victims’ loved ones, and Mackenzie herself speaking from prison.
“There was no intent whatsoever there,” Mackenzie said in the documentary. “I have excessive amounts of remorse for Dominic, Davion [and] both of their families.”
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She has maintained that she has no memory of the moments leading up to the fatal collision, saying she passed out due to postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), a chronic condition that can cause dizziness and fainting. She was 17 at the time.
Shortly after the documentary’s release, PEOPLE obtained the audio of other jail calls in which Mackenzie says she doesn’t “need to be rehabilitated” and expresses concern that she may be unable to “have kids” if she is eventually released from prison, saying she would be “old” by then.
Mackenzie will be eligible for parole at the age of 33 in 2037.
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