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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

The Crash: Was Mackenzie Shirilla the Only Toxic One in That Relationship?

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

True Crime, News, News Commentary

3.3907 Ratings

🗓️ 4 June 2026

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The prosecution's version of the Mackenzie Shirilla case depends on a simple dynamic — she was the aggressor, Dominic Russo was trying to leave, and the crash was her final act of control. Netflix's The Crash leans into that framing. But psychotherapist Shavaun Scott, who has spent decades in domestic violence work, says the clinical reality of relationships like this one is almost never that neat.

The couple broke up and got back together constantly. Family members described explosive fights. Mackenzie sent threatening texts. But she also sent messages about wanting to hurt herself during arguments. And two weeks before the crash, there was an incident on I-71 that the prosecution presented as a rehearsal — a friend heard Mackenzie say "I will crash this car." But text messages show a different story. Mackenzie told Dominic's mother it was Dom who grabbed the steering wheel. Two versions. Only one made it to trial.

Shavaun Scott examines what that competing evidence actually tells a clinician about the relationship — the power dynamics, the attachment patterns, the mutual escalation that the trial's one-sided narrative erased. She looks at what keeps two young people locked in a destructive cycle, what abandonment does to someone with Mackenzie's fragility, and how self-harm threats inside a volatile relationship read very differently to a psychotherapist than they do to a prosecutor.

The relationship was the foundation of the prosecution's case. The question is whether the prosecution understood what it was actually looking at — or whether it saw what it needed to see.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

#MackenzieShirilla #TheCrash #TheCrashNetflix #DominicRusso #DavionFlanagan #ShavaunScott #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #Netflix #CriminalPsychology

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Drink.

0:07.8

The psychology of the relationship itself.

0:11.2

That's what I want to get into as we're talking about McKenzie Chirilla, the subject of the crash on July 2nd of 2022.

0:18.0

Less than a month before the crash, Dominic Russo texted McKinsey that he didn't think

0:23.4

they should be together anymore. He was 20. She was 17. They've been together for about four

0:29.2

years. High school relationship. In a relationship, family members described as explosive,

0:35.9

full of breakups and threats.

0:38.1

29 days later, Dominic was dead in the passenger seat of her car.

0:44.2

I want to talk about this a little bit.

0:45.9

I know we touched on it a little in our first chapter,

0:48.9

but let's dive deeper now into some of her interpersonal relationships,

0:52.4

especially the romantic relationship that she had with Dominic.

0:58.7

And what it means when this type of personality is confronted with something like that, with a breakup,

1:06.8

with somebody saying, I'm not going along with this anymore.

1:09.5

This isn't for me.

1:12.4

This is, because everybody likes to put themselves in the other person's shoes without considering the psychology

1:18.2

of the person. It's like, well, if that was me here, so I would handle it. Do you have a cluster B personality

1:23.4

disorder? Like, if you don't, then doesn't really matter what you think or feel because this person's

1:30.7

prism the way they're seeing and interpreting this information the cause and effect is a very

1:36.9

different process than a healthy brain so we're coming to this when you have we have this

1:43.3

confrontation and it seemed like it was pretty light.

1:47.3

It seems like Dominic was trying to handle it with his kid gloves of hands as he could, and he seemed to know why.

...

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