Is The Netflix Version Of Mackenzie Shirilla The Real One?
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Mackenzie Shirilla appears in Netflix's The Crash speaking from prison for the first time — soft-spoken, remorseful, insisting she has no memory of the crash that killed Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan. An inmate who spent six months with her describes a completely different person — someone doing her makeup, working the prison social hierarchy, nothing like the woman on camera. The families have their version. One father says he needs the truth so he can grieve. The prosecution says surveillance footage proves intent. The judge had her version. Mackenzie has hers. They can't all be right.
Robin Dreeke spent over two decades at the FBI evaluating deception, reading behavior, and separating what people believe from what actually happened. He examines Mackenzie's memory claim through the lens of someone trained to detect constructed narratives versus genuine recall. He looks at how grief drives families toward certainty the evidence may not fully support. He asks whether the same judge who convicted her and then denied post-conviction relief has a confirmation bias problem. And he confronts the question at the center of this case: what if nobody actually knows the full truth?
The behavioral analysis sits alongside a legal breakdown that raises equally uncomfortable questions. Shirilla's defense attorney identified a medical condition that could have explained the crash — and never called an expert. After the conviction, a neurologist found evidence consistent with a medical episode: loss of consciousness, no head trauma, low blood oxygen. The post-conviction petition containing that opinion was denied because it arrived one day past Ohio's statutory deadline.
The prosecution used an I-71 incident as proof of intent. A friend said Mackenzie threatened to crash. Text messages showed Mackenzie said it was actually Dom who grabbed the wheel. Two versions. The defense never challenged the prosecution's. No accident reconstruction expert. No medical testimony. Criminal defense attorney Bob Motta examines whether those cumulative failures amount to ineffective assistance of counsel — and whether Mackenzie Shirilla ever had a real defense at all.
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
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