| I just watched this documentary. If you’ve seen it, do you think Kenzie is guilty? Seemed pretty obvious to me that she deliberately ran her car into the building to kill her boyfriend. |
| Year, I know that teenagers are known for making questionable choices sometimes but why TF would she be driving at 100mph down those tiny suburban streets ? They were just chilling at the friends house until 5am and where presumably going to drop off the friend before the couple goes home. Not exactly joyriding occasion. |
| Just watched it yesterday. I’m curious about the POTs angle but seems like she would’ve gotten a medical expert if it was a legit possibility. |
It seemed like a desperate attempt to bring doubt to the trial. I doubt that she’d be able to maintain control of the car if she was medically incapacitated. How could she have kept the accelerator down to the floor if she was having an episode? Plus, her parents were something else. They didn’t mind that she would regularly drive while smoking weed? When I found weed in my son’s room, no more car keys or phone for minimum of 6 months. Many, many negative drug tests later, he got his phone back. |
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The most chilling part was when they said that she drove so the passenger side would impact the wall first. Imagine that. The three of them chatting together then she actively makes that choice! Even so, I don't know anything about the subject but isn’t it unusual for the driver to survive but all passengers die? When I hear news reports of car crashes the driver is often part of the dead. Maybe the boys didn’t wear seat belts but she did? |
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Watched it last night. My thoughts:
--She was fighting with Dom, lost her temper, was trying to scare him and began driving erratically (as she had in the past). He and possibly Davion tried to grab hold of the steering wheel but they couldn't do anything about the fact that she had her foot firmly on the accelerator. --She was a teenager with a brain that wasn't fully formed, was being impulsive and didn't think about the consequences because she never faced any from her parents in the past. --Her parents were such horrible human beings/parents and clearly low-intelligence. Who lets their kid pursue Insta deals while the kid is clearly anorexic, a school bully, etc. --The whole doc was a train wreck |
| The parents were awful!! |
| She did it intentionally and thought she'd get away with it. Hearing some of her jail house phone calls online made my stomach turn. |
What does she say in those? Does she admit it was intentional? |
She didn't think she'd end up getting charged when it was obviously an accident. She was super excited that the case made it to international news circuits. She's a victim, etc |
| GPS tracking shows she practiced the route before the accident. Netflix didn't have that in the doc. |
100% agree Maybe her parents were always awful, but this doc still really made me think about how unfair it is to kids (and society) when parents act like they’re done with the job of nurturing, supervision and setting boundaries when their kids hit the teen years. They aren’t adults—they need real parents. |
But that would have been a big risk on her part b/c she easily could have died too. |
Most likely the men in the car got a hold of the steering wheel. I think there is more to this. The evidence from the police is a little vague. Murder is premeditated. They were clearly hanging around each other frequently and often out of their free choice. |
| Why were the parents letting her live with her BF as a 17 yo?! |