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Mackenzie Shirilla. Hell on Wheels

  • Jun 10
  • 14 min read

girl's hands on a pink fuzzy steering wheel looking in the rearview mirror of a car

The Crash That Wasn’t an Accident: Remembering Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan

At first, it looked like the kind of wreck that makes even veteran first responders stop cold.

A black Toyota Camry had slammed into the brick wall of a manufacturing building in Strongsville, Ohio, with such force that one responding officer said the car looked as if it had been cut in half. Inside were three young people: 20-year-old Dominic Russo, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan, and 17-year-old Mackenzie Shirilla.

A car became a weapon. Two young men lost their lives. And no amount of public fascination should ever make the convicted killer the center of the story.Only one of them would live to tell the story.

For months, the crash was treated like a horrific tragedy. A teenage driver. A quiet industrial road. A car going far too fast. Two young men dead before their lives had truly begun.

But as investigators pulled apart the evidence—surveillance footage, phone data, vehicle data, witness statements, and the stormy relationship between Mackenzie and Dominic—the story changed. What first appeared to be a fatal accident became something far colder.

A calculated act.

A 100-mile-per-hour impact.

A murder case.

And now, with Netflix’s documentary The Crash bringing the case back into public conversation, it is worth asking the question that true crime too often forgets: who were Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan before the world learned the name of the person convicted of killing them?

Because this story should not belong to Mackenzie Shirilla.

It belongs to Dominic and Davion.


Two Young Men in the Car

Dominic Anthony Russo was 20 years old. He was a son, a brother, a grandson, a nephew, a cousin, an uncle, and a friend. His family described him as deeply loved, surrounded by relatives whose grief would later become part of the courtroom record and public memory of the case.

Dominic had been in a long relationship with Mackenzie Shirilla. They met when they were younger, dated for years, and by 2022, their relationship had become complicated, possessive, volatile, and increasingly frightening to those around them. By the summer of 2022, according to testimony, Dominic was considering ending the relationship for good.

Davion Flanagan was 19. He was the friend in the back seat—the one too often treated as collateral damage in the retelling of this case. But Davion was no footnote. He was a talented athlete, a loyal friend, a loved son and brother, and an aspiring barber. His family later created a memorial scholarship in his name to help others pursue the dream he never got to live.

Dominic and Davion were young men with futures. They had families who expected more birthdays, more dinners, more ordinary days. They had plans. They had inside jokes. They had people who still reach for them in memory and find only absence.

On July 31, 2022, both were passengers in Mackenzie Shirilla’s car.

They were not driving.

They were not in control.

They were trapped inside someone else’s decision.


The Night Before

The hours before the crash did not begin as a headline. They began like countless summer nights among young people.

Mackenzie, Dominic, and Davion had been at a graduation party earlier in the evening. Later, they went to a friend’s house on Brushwood Lane in Strongsville. Testimony described the gathering as laid-back. Friends listened to music. Some smoked marijuana. Some fell asleep. Nothing about the night, at least to those present, seemed to forecast the violence that would come before sunrise.

Davion’s location data later helped establish a timeline. He was at the Brushwood Lane home until about 5:30 a.m. Then he began moving.

Six minutes later, the car crashed.

The route mattered.

Progress Drive was not a highway. It was a cut-through road in an industrial area, with a posted speed limit of 35 mph. Officers familiar with the road described it as rough and bumpy. One officer testified that when he drove that stretch at 54 mph in his cruiser, he felt that was about as fast as he could safely go and still maintain control.

Mackenzie’s Camry was traveling far faster.


The Crash on Progress Drive

Surveillance cameras captured the Camry before impact. The vehicle made controlled turns before heading toward the PLIDCO building near Progress Drive and Alameda Drive. Then, in the final stretch, the car accelerated hard.

The vehicle’s event data recorder became one of the most important pieces of evidence in the case. It showed that the accelerator pedal was fully depressed 4.6 seconds before impact. The throttle remained at 100 percent until shortly before the crash, when the car went airborne over a curb. The data showed no braking in those final seconds.

No braking.

Not a panic stop. Not a skid. Not even a last-second attempt.

The car hit the brick wall with catastrophic force.

Dominic was in the front passenger seat. Davion was in the back. Both suffered fatal injuries. Davion was initially believed to be dead, then found to have signs of life, but he died at the scene before he could be airlifted. Dominic also died at the scene.

Mackenzie survived with serious injuries.

That survival would become central to the case. Prosecutors argued this was not merely a reckless crash. They argued Mackenzie had intentionally turned the car into a weapon, intending to kill Dominic and, by extension, killing Davion too.

Judge Nancy Margaret Russo, who is not related to Dominic Russo, later called Mackenzie “hell on wheels.”


The Relationship Before the Impact

One of the most disturbing parts of the case is what the court heard about the weeks before the crash.

Dominic and Mackenzie’s relationship had deteriorated. Witnesses described fighting, breakups, threats, and possessiveness. Dominic’s mother, Christine Russo, testified that Mackenzie had become more possessive of Dominic. Dominic’s brother testified that the couple had broken up many times and that Dominic was considering ending things permanently in June and July of 2022.

Then there was the earlier car incident.

A family friend testified that, earlier in July 2022, Dominic called his mother upset. The friend went to pick him up and found Dominic and Mackenzie on the shoulder of Interstate 71. During the argument, according to testimony, Mackenzie said, “I’m going to wreck this car right now.”

That statement became chilling in hindsight.

The court also heard about videos recorded in July, after that highway incident, in which Mackenzie could be heard threatening Dominic and threatening to break into his house.

This mattered because prosecutors needed to prove intent. A terrible crash alone is not necessarily murder. A teenager driving too fast is not automatically a killer. But a pattern of threats, escalating control, prior statements about wrecking a car, and vehicle data showing deliberate acceleration with no braking created a case far beyond reckless driving.

The prosecution’s theory was clear: Mackenzie wanted to end the relationship on her terms. If Dominic was leaving her, she would make sure he never left at all.

Davion, prosecutors argued, was simply in the wrong seat at the wrong time with the wrong driver.


The Defense: Blackout, Medical Episode, and No Memory

Mackenzie’s defense maintained that she did not intentionally crash the car. She said she could not remember what happened. Her family and defense pointed to possible medical explanations, including POTS—postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome—which can cause dizziness or fainting in some people.

There were facts the defense tried to use. Mackenzie had significant injuries. She was confused after the crash. Her blood-oxygen level at one point was recorded as extremely low. Medical witnesses acknowledged that, in theory, a person could have a seizure or mini-stroke and recover before later evaluation.

But the court did not accept that explanation.

Medical records showed that when Mackenzie was evaluated at the hospital, she was alert and oriented. Her heart rhythm was normal. A vehicle expert found no evidence of mechanical failure. The brakes were functional. The accelerator had not malfunctioned. A slipper found near the pedal did not explain unintended acceleration. The event data showed the gas was floored and the brakes were not used.

The judge was left with the evidence of the car, the route, the relationship, the prior threats, and the final seconds.

And those seconds told a brutal story.


The Bench Trial and Conviction

Mackenzie waived her right to a jury trial, meaning the case was decided by a judge in a bench trial.

In August 2023, she was convicted on 12 felony counts, including four counts of murder, four counts of felonious assault, two counts of aggravated vehicular homicide, drug possession, and possession of criminal tools.

The court found that she acted purposely and intentionally.

At sentencing, family members of Dominic and Davion addressed the court. The state argued Mackenzie lacked remorse and pointed to videos and photographs of her after the crash, including social media behavior during the investigation.

The judge called the crash the result of a selfish, intentional, and cruel decision and sentenced Mackenzie to two concurrent terms of 15 years to life in prison. Her driver’s license was suspended for life.

That concurrent sentence is one of the most painful parts for many who follow the case. Two lives were taken, but the sentences run at the same time. Legally, Mackenzie may be eligible for parole after 15 years. Emotionally, for the Russo and Flanagan families, the math will never add up.

Dominic does not get 15 years.

Davion does not get 15 years.

They got one morning in July, and then nothing more.


The Lesser-Known Details That Matter

One of the details often missed in shorter retellings is that first responders initially believed all three people in the car were dead. Mackenzie was only discovered to be alive after officers heard mumbling while breaking windows and cutting airbags.

Another lesser-discussed fact is that Davion’s location data was preserved because a friend, connected with him through Life360 and Snapchat, took a screenshot after hearing about the crash and gave it to police. That small act helped establish the timeline from the Brushwood Lane home to the crash site.

There is also the matter of the medical examiner. Dominic and Davion’s deaths were initially classified as accidental. After the prosecutor’s office later provided additional investigative materials, the medical examiner changed the manner of death from accident to homicide. On appeal, Mackenzie’s team challenged issues connected to that change, but the appellate court found there was other evidence supporting the verdict.

Another detail: the road itself was important. Progress Drive was rough, curved, and not designed for 100 mph driving. A trained officer testified he felt 54 mph was near the limit of what he could safely manage on that road. That made the prosecution’s argument stronger: this was not a normal road taken a little too fast. This was a car driven at highway speed into a fixed object in an industrial zone.

And then there is Davion’s scholarship.

His family turned grief into purpose by creating a memorial scholarship for barber school students. In a case so often consumed by Mackenzie’s image, Mackenzie’s interviews, Mackenzie’s appeals, and Mackenzie’s social media presence, that scholarship is a reminder of the young man in the back seat.

Davion wanted a future.

His family is helping someone else reach theirs.


Why The Crash Brought the Case Back

Netflix’s The Crash arrived with the kind of built-in controversy true crime now seems to generate almost instantly. The documentary revisits the case, the relationship, the crash, the investigation, and Mackenzie’s version of events. It also places the story back into the algorithmic churn of online debate, where convicted killers can become characters and victims can become background.

That is one of the dangers of modern true crime.

A case like this has all the pieces that attract attention: a young female defendant, a beautiful social media image, a volatile teenage romance, drugs, surveillance footage, courtroom drama, and a claim of memory loss. Those elements are exactly why the public clicks.

But they are not why the case matters.

The case matters because Dominic Russo was killed.

The case matters because Davion Flanagan was killed.

The case matters because families who once opened their homes and hearts now live with the permanent knowledge that their sons died in a car driven deliberately into a wall.

The case matters because teen relationship violence is often minimized until it becomes fatal.

And the case matters because Davion’s death shows how often a second victim can be swallowed by the main narrative. He was not part of the romantic conflict. He was not the target prosecutors focused on. He was a friend getting a ride.

He still died.


Victims Before Notoriety

Since the documentary’s release, Dominic’s sister Christine Russo has spoken publicly about the risk of Mackenzie becoming infamous in the wrong way. She and others have advocated for stronger laws to prevent convicted criminals from profiting from the notoriety of their crimes, especially in the age of social media, sponsorships, fan accounts, and online monetization.

That effort gets to the heart of a growing true crime problem.

The old “Son of Sam” laws were built for book deals and movie checks. The new world is different. Fame can come from TikTok edits, monetized interviews, subscriptions, indirect family-run accounts, merchandise, and influencer-style attention. A convicted killer does not need a publishing contract to become a brand.

And when that happens, victims are killed twice: first in life, then again in memory.

Dominic and Davion deserve better than to be reduced to plot points in Mackenzie Shirilla’s story. They deserve names spoken first. They deserve lives remembered fully. They deserve a public that can examine the case without turning the convicted murderer into the main attraction.


What Remains

In the end, the evidence in court came down to control.

Control of the relationship.

Control of the wheel.

Control of the accelerator.

Control of the final seconds Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan had on earth.

A teenage girl drove a car into a building at nearly 100 mph. Two young men died. A judge looked at the evidence and called it murder.

The Netflix documentary may have brought the case back into the headlines, but the real story has never changed.

It is not about spectacle.

It is not about a viral defendant.

It is not about whether a camera can make remorse look convincing.

It is about Dominic Russo, 20, and Davion Flanagan, 19—two young men who should have grown older, made mistakes, changed their minds, chased their dreams, annoyed their siblings, hugged their mothers, and lived the long, ordinary lives they were owed.

Instead, they became victims in a crash that the court determined was no accident.

And no documentary, no appeal, no social media debate, and no public fascination should ever bury the most important truth of all:

Dominic and Davion were here.

They were loved.

And they should still be alive.



To give to Davion Flanagan's Scholarship, go to: https://www.gofundme.com/f/davion-flanagan


Sources used for this podcast:

News and feature articles

People. (2026, May 28). Mackenzie Shirilla and boyfriend discussed blackouts in texts weeks before fatal crash. https://people.com/mackenzie-shirilla-boyfriend-discussed-blackouts-in-texts-weeks-before-fatal-crash-11985690

NBC News. (2026, May 15). What to know about Mackenzie Shirilla, the Ohio teen who killed her boyfriend and his friend in a 100 mph crash. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/mackenzie-shirilla-ohio-teen-boyfriend-crash-case-rcna345021

Global News. (2023, August 21). Ohio woman who killed boyfriend, friend in 100 mph car crash sentenced to life in prison. https://globalnews.ca/news/9912181/ohio-woman-car-crash-boyfriend-murder-mackenzie-shirilla/

A&E. (2026, May 13). Why Mackenzie Shirilla’s deadly car crash was ruled a murder. https://www.aetv.com/articles/mackenzie-shirilla-deadly-car-crash

E! News. (2026). Mackenzie Shirilla’s The Crash: Gypsy Rose Blanchard weighs in. https://www.eonline.com/news/1432477/mackenzie-shirillas-the-crash-gypsy-rose-blanchard-weighs-in

WKYC. (2023, April 13). $500K bond set for Strongsville teenager accused in double fatal accident. https://www.cleveland19.com/2023/04/13/500k-bond-set-strongsville-teenager-accused-double-fatal-accident/

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office. (2023, August 20). Strongsville woman sentenced to life in prison for crash that killed two. https://www.ccprosecutor.us/strongsville-woman-sentenced-life-in-prison-crash-killed-two/

Sky News. (2023, August 21). Ohio teen Mackenzie Shirilla sentenced for murdering her boyfriend and his friend in 100 mph car crash. https://news.sky.com/video/ohio-teen-mackenzie-shirilla-sentenced-for-murdering-her-boyfriend-and-his-friend-in-100mph-car-crash-12945035

Axios Cleveland. (2026, May 27). “The Crash” and other documentaries about Mackenzie Shirilla. https://www.axios.com/local/cleveland/2026/05/27/netflix-the-crash-mackenzie-shirilla-other-documentaries

New York Post. (2023, August 18). Father of Mackenzie Shirilla’s boyfriend doesn’t support her life sentence. https://nypost.com/2023/08/18/father-of-mackenzie-shirillas-boyfriend-doesnt-support-life-sentence/

Fox News. (2023). Watch: Mackenzie Shirilla’s father calls “dumb” 18-year-old in police bodycam video. https://www.foxnews.com/us/watch-mackenzie-shirilla-father-calls-dumb-18-year-old-berating-police-bodycam-video

NewsNation. (2026). Netflix documentary “The Crash” renews spotlight on Mackenzie Shirilla, Dominic Russo, and Strongsville case. https://www.newsnationnow.com/crime/mackenzie-shirilla-netflix-documentary-dominic-russo-strongsville/

The Tab. (2026, June 4). So Mackenzie Shirilla has now fully confessed she did crash the car on purpose. https://thetab.com/2026/06/04/so-mackenzie-shirilla-has-now-fully-confessed-she-did-crash-the-car-on-purpose

AOL. (2026). “Hell on Wheels” killer Mackenzie Shirilla: Where she is now and what happened in the case. https://www.aol.com/articles/hell-wheels-killer-mackenzie-shirilla-110000454.html

Oxygen. (2026). Mackenzie Shirilla’s ex Shyann Topping details prison romance and “Boujee Behind Bars” nickname. https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/mackenzie-shirillas-ex-shyann-topping-details-prison-romance-nickname

Cleveland.com. (2024, June). “Delinquent after Davion was killed”: Family of Davion Flanagan still seeks closure after teen driver kills him. https://www.cleveland.com/news/2024/06/delinquent-after-davion-was-killed-by-a-teen-driver-his-family-still-seeks-closure.html

AOL. (2026). Where Davion Flanagan’s family is now after “The Crash” documentary. https://www.aol.com/articles/where-davion-flanagan-family-now-100000240.html

Cleveland.com. (n.d.). Photos: Remembering Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan in the Strongsville crash case [Photo gallery]. https://www.cleveland.com/galleries/AX5O5ANFJ5HD5LNCYW6MIEXQUY/

Biography.com. (2026). Who were Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan from The Crash? https://www.biography.com/crime/a71283643/dominic-russo-davion-flanagan-the-crash

The National. (2026, May 22). Netflix’s The Crash: True-crime review of the Mackenzie Shirilla case. https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/film-tv/2026/05/22/netflix-the-crash-true-crime-review-mackenzie-shirilla/

Santa Maria Sun. (2026). The Crash asks: Did a teen intentionally crash, killing her boyfriend? https://www.santamariasun.com/arts/the-crash-asks-did-a-teen-intentionally-crash-killing-her-boyfriend/

Yahoo Entertainment. (2026). Where is Mackenzie Shirilla now and does she appear in The Crash? https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/tv/articles/where-mackenzie-shirilla-now-does-155201856.html

AOL. (2026). What Mackenzie Shirilla told her mom from jail about The Crash documentary. https://www.aol.com/entertainment/mackenzie-shirilla-told-mom-jail-190016988.html

Yahoo News. (2026). “Narcissist” Mackenzie Shirilla is acting like a princess in prison, source claims. https://www.yahoo.com/news/us/articles/narcissist-mackenzie-shirilla-acting-princess-223245495.html

People. (2024). Sister of man killed by girlfriend in intentional 100 mph crash says family will never be whole again. https://people.com/sister-man-killed-girlfriend-intentional-crash-100-mph-family-never-be-whole-again-7852471

Fox News. (2023). Ohio teen sobs as she learns fate for intentionally killing boyfriend and passenger in car wreck. https://www.foxnews.com/us/ohio-teen-sobs-learns-fate-intentionally-killing-boyfriend-passenger-car-wreck

Cleveland.com. (2018, July 20). Cuyahoga County judge among several who improperly jailed defendants for contempt, appeals court finds. https://www.cleveland.com/court-justice/2018/07/cuyahoga_county_judge_among_se_1.html

Blue to Gold. (n.d.). Zaki Hazou: Instructor bio. https://bluetogold.com/instructors/zaki-hazou/

People. (2026). Where is Rosie Graham from The Crash now? https://people.com/where-is-rosie-graham-the-crash-now-11982168

People. (2026). Mackenzie Shirilla’s prison ex got text threats after breakup. https://people.com/mackenzie-shirilla-prison-ex-got-text-threats-after-breakup-exclusive-11983920

Official case files and curated evidence

Shirilla, M. (2026). State of Ohio v. Mackenzie Shirilla: Case files, videos, photos & records [Website]. https://www.shirilla.net

Shirilla, M. (2026). State of Ohio v. Mackenzie Shirilla: Surveillance videos [Video collection]. https://shirilla.net/browse/Surveillance%20Videos/Surveillance%20Videos

Google Drive. (n.d.). Text messages in State of Ohio v. Mackenzie Shirilla [PDF]. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1t55d_M-TxTLToK2ndGFGwOH7hwdVaBDZ/view?usp=drivesdk

Obituary and family-focused pieces

Jardine Funeral Home. (2023). Obituary for Davion Flanagan. https://www.jardinefh.com/obituaries/davion-flanagan/obituary

Social media and user-generated content

Boujee Behind Bars. (n.d.). Boujee Behind Bars [TikTok profile]. TikTok. https://www.tiktok.com/@boujeebehindbars

Reddit. (2024). Mackenzie speaking Pig Latin in the hospital [Online forum post]. Reddit r/CasesWeFollow. https://www.reddit.com/r/CasesWeFollow/comments/1ttl7xv/mackenzie_speaking_pig_latin_in_the_hospital/

New York Post. (2023). Photo of Mackenzie Shirilla following sentencing [Image attached to post]. X (formerly Twitter). https://x.com/nypost/status/1692313748101320853/photo/1

Graham, R. (n.d.). @rosiegraham_ [Instagram profile]. Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/rosiegraham_/?hl=en

Graham, R. (2026). Instagram post related to The Crash [Photo]. Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/p/DYzzqsQig7e/

Graham, R. (n.d.). Rose Graham [YouTube channel]. YouTube. (Search “Rosie Graham YouTube”; use channel URL once selected.)

Video clips and broadcasts

FOX 32 Chicago. (n.d.). Full measure coverage: Mackenzie Shirilla case [Video]. FOX 32. https://www.fox32chicago.com/video/fmc-bw1u0ucrc3pcxnzf

Sky News. (2023). Ohio teen Mackenzie Shirilla sentenced for murdering her boyfriend and his friend in 100 mph car crash [Video]. https://news.sky.com/video/ohio-teen-mackenzie-shirilla-sentenced-for-murdering-her-boyfriend-and-his-friend-in-100mph-car-crash-12945035

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IMDb. (n.d.). The Crash (2026). In Netflix original documentaries [Filmography entry]. IMDb. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt40792117/

IMDb. (n.d.). Mean Girl Murders (TV Series). Episode: Under the Influence (Season 2, Episode 7). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14055798/

IMDb. (n.d.). Killer Cases (TV Series). Episode: Murder on Wheels (Season 4, Episode 12). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt26742875/

Films, series, and specials (no URLs provided)

Mean Girls [Film]. (2004). Paramount Pictures.

Cameron Crowe’s Jerry Maguire [Film]. (1996). TriStar Pictures.

Trading Places [Film]. (1983). Paramount Pictures.

Morgan, L. A. (n.d.). Lee Ann Morgan [Stand-up comedy specials]. Various distributors.

Netflix. (2026). The Crash [Film]. Netflix.

Investigation Discovery. (2024). Mean Girl Murders: Under the Influence (Season 2, Episode 7) [TV series episode].

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Other reference works

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Double Dutch Bus. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Dutch_Bus



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1 Comment


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