Mackenzie Shirilla will spend at least 15 years in prison after Judge Nancy Margaret Russo found her guilty of murder and aggravated vehicular homicide. Judge Russo said a video of the seconds before the deadly crash proves Mackenzie intended to kill Davion Flanagan and Dominic Russo. βShe chose a course of death and destruction that day,β Judge Russo said. βShe morphed from a responsible driver to literal hell on wheels.β
Mackenzie Shirilla was born to Natalie S. and Steven J. Shirilla in Strongsville, Ohio
Natalie S. and Steven J. Shirilla welcomed Mackenzie Shirilla about a year after settling in Strongsville, Ohio.
Steven is a designer who graduated from Ohio University in 1990 with a BFA in Graphic Design. He worked as an art director at WUAB and WBNS TV 10 in Cleveland and Columbus, respectively, before securing a job as a marketing designer at WKYC-TV 3. Layoffs forced Steven’s departure from the media outlet. Per his LinkedIn page, he is an art teacher at Mary Queen of Peace School.
Natalie hit local news in April 2018 when she claimed that an Apple charger nearly started a fire at her home. She told WKYC that the charging cord started burning and emitting smoke minutes after she plugged her iPad in. βAwful. Horrible. That would have been a nightmare,β she told the outlet. βIf I would have been asleep – that wouldβve been it.β
Court records show Natalie and Steven filed for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy in May 2022, two months before Mackenzieβs fatal crash. The couple hasnβt spoken publicly about the case.
Stephanie Jessup, Natalieβs sister and Mackenzieβs aunt, started a GoFundMe page to support Mackenzieβs recovery a day after the crash. βHer injuries are extensive and will require long-term medical care. Mackenzie’s family will need to be there to support her in her healing. Funds will be used to cover medical expenses and assist the family as they adjust to this new and devastating situation,β the appeal reads.
After the guilty verdict, Mackenzieβs family members told her they loved her as sheriffβs deputies led the sobbing convict away. They are expected to attend her sentencing on 21st August 2021.
James McDonell, Mackenzieβs defense attorney, hopes to convince the judge not to sentence his client to life. McDonell argues that no one knows what happened inside Mackenzieβs car before the crash. βItβs not clear,β he told FOX 8, βitβs not explicit to draw inference that she acted purposely.β