Netflix documentary renews spotlight on Mackenzie Shirilla’s Strongsville crash case
‘The Crash’ has thrust Mackenzie Shirilla’s murder case back into the national spotlight, highlighting the impact of true crime media on closed legal cases.

Credit: Strongsville Police Department
Years after a 100 mph crash that killed two people andĀ ended in a life sentence, a Northeast Ohio case is suddenly back in the national spotlight ā driven not by a courtroom filing, but by aĀ Netflix documentaryĀ and a surge of online searches.
The renewed attention is raising new questions about how true crime storytelling can reshape public interest in cases considered closed.
Mackenzie Shirilla was sentenced in 2023 to life in prison after prosecutors said she intentionally drove her car into a brick building in Strongsville ā killing her boyfriend, 20-year-old Dominic Russo, and his friend, 19-year-old Davion Flanagan. She won’t be eligible for parole until Oct. 29, 2037.
At trial, prosecutors argued Shirilla never applied the brakes and described the crash as intentional. She was convicted in a bench trial on multiple counts, including murder, and her sentence wasĀ upheld on appeal. A separate bid for a new trial was also denied by the same judge who found Shirilla guilty, with an appeals courtĀ affirming the decision.
After years of post-conviction filings and appellate rulings, the case had largely faded from public view until Netflix released the documentary “The Crash” this past week. Since the film’s release, Google Trends data show Shirilla’s name has ranked among the top three most-searched topics nationwide over the past week, signaling a sharp resurgence in public attention.
Legal experts say that pattern is increasingly common when streaming platforms revisit high-profile criminal cases.
“That’s part of the power of the internet, right?” said Michael J. Benza, a professor of practice at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. He explained that true crime documentaries have become a major driver of audience engagement in the streaming era.
“So this is one thing that is a reliable way to get eyes on your platform,” he told 3News.
Benza says renewed attention does not typically change prior court rulings, but it can reshape public conversation around them.
“Post-trial, they have taken a deep dive into a criminal case and really explored and presented significant questions about the validity of the conviction,” he said.
In some instances, he added, renewed visibility can also be used by defendants or supporters as part of continued efforts to challenge a conviction.
“If you get some positive publicity about issues in your case, it makes it easier to maybe get back into a court and have some review,” he noted.
However, Benza cautioned that the influence of documentaries and dramatized storytelling can also blur public understanding of what was presented in court.
“That can have very negative consequences for those people who are touched by this,” he said. “What actually happened isn’t the reality anymore, because the reality gets supplanted by the Netflix documentary or by the ‘Law and Order’ episode.”
Shirilla’s defense has previously maintained that she did not intentionally kill the victims; prosecutors have argued the evidence showed the crash was deliberate.
Now, years after sentencing and multiple unsuccessful appeals, the case is once again circulating widely online ā shaped as much by streaming audiences and search algorithms as by the court record that originally closed it.
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