Mackenzie Shirilla was 'mean girl' of prison
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Steve Shirilla was placed on administrative leave from his teaching job after adamantly defending his “Hell on wheels” daughter Mackenzie Shirilla in a new Netflix documentary.
"From the way she acted and carried herself, remorseful was the last thing she gave off," Kat Crowder, who was in prison with Shirilla for six months, told PEOPLE
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The crash’s Hulu version goes much deeper into the Mackenzie Shirilla case than Netflix’s latest doc
Mackenzie Shirilla became widely known after a deadly 2022 crash led to a shocking and emotional courtroom case. While Netflix might have explored the disturbing details surrounding the trial there seems to be a better microscopic view of it over on Hulu.
THE chilling double-murder case of Mackenzie Shirilla is back in the spotlight after a hit Netflix documentary left viewers horrified — but several disturbing details were left out of the film.
“Hell on Wheels” killer Mackenzie Shirilla incredulously whined she was the “third victim” of a fatal wreck in which she intentionally crashed her car and killed her boyfriend and friend during a jailhouse call,
Natalie explained that Mackenzie—who is serving out a sentence of 15 years to life—would have access to visitation, school programs and other resources once she was sent to prison. “I like how they try to make it, like, enjoyable there,” Mackenzie ...
Mackenzie Shirilla was sentenced to 15 years to life behind bars for the deadly crash, which killed Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan on July 31, 2022.