Double murderer Mackenzie Shirilla launches desperate bid for freedom

Mackenzie Shirilla is taking her case back to the Ohio Supreme Court in what appears to be a last-ditch attempt to overturn her conviction, even as new posed photos from prison surface online.

Shirilla, 22, was found guilty in 2023 of killing her boyfriend, 20-year-old Dominic Russo, and their friend, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan, after prosecutors said she deliberately drove a car into a building at nearly 100 mph just two days before she turned 18.

She is currently incarcerated at the Ohio Reformatory for Women, serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life. Her earliest parole eligibility date is set for September 2037, when she will be 33.

On Monday, supporters managing Shirilla’s Instagram account shared a new prison selfie, writing that she “is trying to do better every day and holding on to hope.”

The following day, attorneys for the convicted killer asked the Ohio Supreme Court to revisit a ruling issued last month that rejected her post-conviction relief petition on the grounds that it was filed too late.

Shirilla had turned to the state’s highest court after multiple lower courts dismissed her earlier appeals, but that effort was denied in May 2025.

She then pursued post-conviction relief, a separate legal avenue that allows defendants to challenge a conviction or sentence outside the standard appeals process, marking what may be her final bid for release.

That filing was rejected by the appellate court last month because it arrived 366 days after the trial transcript was submitted — one day beyond the deadline. In Tuesday’s request for reconsideration, her legal team argued that the timing rules were unclear.

Convicted double murderer Mackenzie Shirilla's support team posted this selfie she took from prison on her Instagram and said she 'is trying to do better every day and holding on to hope'

Convicted double murderer Mackenzie Shirilla’s support team posted this selfie she took from prison on her Instagram and said she ‘is trying to do better every day and holding on to hope’

Shirilla's attorneys have filed a motion asking the Ohio Supreme Court to reconsider a decision it made denying her post-conviction relief petition, which was her last chance at freedom

Shirilla’s attorneys have filed a motion asking the Ohio Supreme Court to reconsider a decision it made denying her post-conviction relief petition, which was her last chance at freedom

Pictured: Dominic Russo, 20

Pictured: Davion Flanagan, 19

Shirilla remains behind bars at the Ohio Reformatory for Women for killing her boyfriend, Dominic Russo, 20, and their friend, Davion Flanagan, 19

Shirilla’s attorneys have argued that she should have been allowed more time to submit the motion because juvenile court transcripts were not filed until months after the trial transcripts. 

Her attorneys also argued that the delay was the result of a miscalculation tied to a leap year. 

‘Her post conviction relief was denied due to a deadline technicality,’ Shirilla’s support team wrote on Instagram.

‘The decision has nothing to do with the contents of it, it was unable to even be reviewed. Her appellate lawyer missed a deadline by filing it one day late due to a leap year, which also makes HIM ineffective assistance of council,’ the team added.

Shirilla’s legal team previously fought to overturn her conviction through three separate appeals – two in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court and another in the Eighth District Court of Appeals. 

Her attorneys have repeatedly argued that medical evidence suggests Shirilla suffered from a pre-existing condition that may have caused her to lose consciousness before slamming her sedan into a brick building.

They claimed that her trial lawyers failed to adequately investigate evidence that she suffers from Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, or POTS.

Tuesday’s motion asking the Supreme Court to reconsider Shirilla’s petition comes years after prosecutors said she deliberately drove her Toyota Camry into the side of the PLIDCO building in Strongsville, Ohio, on July 31, 2022, as her relationship with Russo deteriorated.

Shirilla's attorneys have argued that she suffered from a pre-existing condition that may have caused her to lose consciousness before slamming her sedan into a brick building at nearly 100mph

Shirilla’s attorneys have argued that she suffered from a pre-existing condition that may have caused her to lose consciousness before slamming her sedan into a brick building at nearly 100mph

Shirilla survived the crash and was hospitalized with multiple severe injuries. She has called herself a 'third victim' who does not need to be 'rehabilitated'

Shirilla survived the crash and was hospitalized with multiple severe injuries. She has called herself a ‘third victim’ who does not need to be ‘rehabilitated’

While Russo and Flanagan died almost instantly, Shirilla survived the crash and was hospitalized with multiple severe injuries. 

Evidence presented at trial showed that the vehicle was traveling approximately 100mph in a 35mph zone moments before impact, with data indicating the accelerator was fully engaged and no brakes were applied.

Surveillance video showed the car speeding down a quiet road before smashing through a business sign and slamming into the building, with first responders finding the vehicle split in half in what one officer called ‘the worst crash I’ve ever seen.’

Shirilla has maintained that the crash was not intentional, calling herself a ‘third victim’ who does not need to be ‘rehabilitated’ in shocking phone calls with her mother.

Judge Nancy Margaret Russo ultimately found her guilty in 2023, famously declaring: ‘This was not reckless driving – this was murder.’

‘She had a mission, and she executed it with precision,’ the judge said.

The case has remained in the headlines in recent weeks following the release of the Netflix documentary, The Crash, which revisited the fatal collision and featured interviews with Shirilla from prison.

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