Five Words That Stunned the Courtroom: New Prison Calls Put Mackenzie Shirilla Back Under Scrutiny
By U.S. Crime Desk
The case of Mackenzie Shirilla has returned to the public spotlight, not because of new charges, but because of old words now being heard in a new context.
Newly surfaced jail and prison calls linked to Shirilla, the Ohio woman convicted of killing Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan in a 2022 high-speed crash, are drawing renewed attention after the release of Netflix’s documentary The Crash. In those calls, Shirilla is heard discussing her case, her fears about sentencing, and her version of what happened before the fatal impact.
But one claim now spreading online has become especially explosive: that Shirilla allegedly said five words about Davion Flanagan that stunned people who heard them.
Authorities have not publicly verified a specific “five-word” statement about Flanagan as newly surfaced courtroom testimony. No official court filing has confirmed that such a sentence changed the legal outcome. But renewed media coverage of Shirilla’s jail calls has reopened debate over whether her private words show grief, fear, denial, or something far colder.
Shirilla was 17 when she drove a Toyota Camry into a brick building in Strongsville, Ohio, on July 31, 2022. Russo, her boyfriend, and Flanagan, their friend, were killed. Prosecutors argued that Shirilla deliberately accelerated to nearly 100 mph and did not brake before impact. She was convicted in 2023 on multiple charges, including murder, and is serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life.
The case has become newly prominent after Netflix released The Crash on May 15, 2026. In the documentary, Shirilla speaks publicly from prison and continues to deny that she intended to kill anyone, saying she has no memory of the crash. Netflix’s own coverage describes the film as Shirilla’s first prison interview about the case.
The renewed attention has been intensified by reports of recorded jail calls. PEOPLE reported that Shirilla referred to herself as the “third victim” in one call with her mother, a phrase that sparked backlash because two young men died while she survived. Entertainment Weekly also reported on a jail call in which Shirilla expressed fear about the death penalty or a life sentence, although she did not receive the death penalty and is eligible for parole in 2037.
Another newly reported detail has deepened public suspicion: Shirilla was allegedly heard speaking with her mother in a coded or “secret” language during jail calls. Entertainment Weekly reported that authorities decoded the language and that prosecutors presented it during her 2023 trial. In one call, she allegedly discussed telling police she had suffered a seizure.
For Davion Flanagan’s family, the renewed coverage is painful because his death is sometimes overshadowed by the focus on Shirilla and Russo’s relationship. Prosecutors argued that the motive centered on Shirilla’s troubled relationship with Russo, but Flanagan was also in the car. He was not a side note. He was a 19-year-old victim whose life ended in the same crash.
That is why any alleged remark about Flanagan now carries such emotional weight.
If the five words were dismissive, they could reinforce the prosecution’s argument that Shirilla failed to show true remorse. If they were defensive, they could deepen the divide between her version of the crash and the court’s conclusion. If they were taken out of context, they could become another example of how viral fragments can distort a case already shaped by grief and anger.
The legal conclusion, however, has not changed.
The judge found that the crash was intentional. Shirilla’s defense argued that she may have blacked out because of a medical condition, but prosecutors relied on vehicle data, crash reconstruction, video evidence, and the absence of braking to show deliberate action.
Now, the public is hearing the case again through prison interviews, jail recordings, and documentary clips. But for the families of Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan, the central fact remains unchanged.
Two young men died.
One driver survived.
And the court decided it was murder.
The alleged five words may dominate social media.
But the words that mattered most were the judge’s: Shirilla was guilty.
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