‘Hell on wheels’ killer Mackenzie Shirilla lands prison job while serving life sentence for fatal 2022 crash

Convicted killer Mackenzie Shirilla has been assigned a prison job as she serves a life sentence for the 2022 crash that killed her boyfriend and one of their friends, Ohio prison officials confirmed to News Agency.

According to Tara Nickle, a correction warden assistant and public information officer for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, Shirilla’s current work assignment at the Ohio Reformatory for Women is in food service.

Officials did not release additional details about the position, citing exemptions under Ohio’s public-records law.

The limited update on Shirilla’s day-to-day life behind bars comes as the case has drawn fresh attention following Netflix’s “The Crash,” which revisited the deadly wreck that prosecutors argued was intentional, leading to the driver being labeled “hell on wheels.”

Shirilla, now 21, is serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life for the deaths of her boyfriend, 20-year-old Dominic Russo, and their friend, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan. Prosecutors said she deliberately drove her Toyota Camry into a brick building in Strongsville, Ohio, on July 31, 2022.

Shirilla, now 21, is serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life in prison for killing her boyfriend, Dominic Russo, 20, and their friend, Davion Flanagan, 19, after prosecutors said she deliberately slammed her Toyota Camry into a brick building in Strongsville, Ohio, on July 31, 2022.

Police records reviewed by News Agency show Strongsville officers responded around 6:15 a.m. on July 31, 2022, after the Camry struck the PLIDCO building at 11792 Alameda Drive in Strongsville.

Dominic Russo and Damion Flanagan were killed July 31, 2022, when Mackenzie Shirilla intentionally crashed her car into a wall, authorities said. She was convicted of four counts of murder and other charges for their deaths.  (A. Ripepi and Sons Funeral/ Jardine Funeral HomeHOme)

Shirilla, then 17, was removed from the driver’s seat and flown to MetroHealth Medical Center. Russo and Flanagan were pronounced dead after being mechanically extricated from the wreckage, records show.

A grand jury presentation reviewed by News Agency said Life360 data showed the vehicle traveling 90 mph in a 35 mph zone, while Event Data Recorder information showed the accelerator fully engaged and no service brake applied in the seconds before the devastating crash.

Mackenzie Shirilla looks on during her sentencing in the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court in Cleveland, Ohio, on Monday, Aug. 21, 2023. She was found guilty of four counts of murder and other charges related to the deaths of her boyfriend, Dominic Russo, and his friend, Davion Flanagan, in July 2022.

A later police request to the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office said the deaths were initially classified as accidental, but investigators believed the evidence showed the crash was “not an accident, but an intentional act.”

Police asked the medical examiner to conduct a secondary review and change the manner of death to homicide.

Prosecutors argued at trial that Shirilla drove into the building to end her toxic relationship with Russo, and that Flanagan was an unintended victim who happened to be in the car. Shirilla’s case is back in the limelight after Netflix’s new series, “The Crash.”

Mackenzie Shirilla sitting behind the wheel of a Toyota Camry and a portrait of Davion Flanagan

Mackenzie Shirilla sits behind the wheel of her Toyota Camry alongside a photo of Davion Flanagan, one of two men she was convicted of murdering. (Instagram)

Since the docuseries, Shirilla’s lawyers have asked the Ohio Supreme Court for an appeal.

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In a filing with the Ohio Supreme Court reviewed by News Agency, Shirilla’s attorneys argue her trial lawyers failed to adequately investigate evidence that she suffered from Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, or POTS. The syndrome, they say, could have caused her to lose consciousness before the crash.

The defense says the condition was only “cursorily referenced” at trial, despite Shirilla and her family allegedly putting her attorneys on notice about it. Her lawyers now argue trial counsel should have dug deeper and sought expert testimony to explain whether POTS could account for Shirilla’s failure to brake before impact.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley “believes without question that Mackenzie Shirilla is guilty of murder,” his office said in a May 27 statement.

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