For murder motive is important. These people were happy to frequently hang around each other. I am suspicious about Netflix as a source of correct information. The only reason a documentary like this was even made is to get views. Something is always edited and the media is what it is. All I can say is that the burden of proof for a premeditated murder takes far more than what was exposed in the documentary |
| Excuse any ignorance in this comment, but I thought it was a little odd that here she is 17 living with a 20-year-old and the other kid is 19? Did they all go to the same high school or something? |
| Eerily similar to Something’s wrong with Aunt Diane, including the extreme denial of family members. |
| These are some of the trashiest people I have ever seen, except for the family of one of the victims. We need to stop giving people like this a platform in entertainment. |
| I think the girl friend who wouldn't speak to the prosecutor knows way more than what she said in documentary. |
The state of Ohio sentenced her to two concurrent sentences of 15 to life for double murder. Netflix didn’t litigate her, the legal system did! |
Exactly! And some could argue that the sentence is too short. She’ll be free by her late 30s. |
| There’s something majorily off with the whole family. In one of the calls from jail/prison Mackenzie’s mother seems like she’s barely listening to her, and is just pacifying her. It seems like they wanted to do zero parenting with a difficult/oppositional child. |
This is what I came here to say. WTF?? |
Davion's dad seemed like the most sane parent involved. My heart really went out to him as he was trying to parent Davion and his sister. The sister was impressive too. Suspect the mom (and Dom's mom) wanted nothing to do with the documentary. |
She’ll be up for parole after 15 years. It doesn’t mean she will be released. For a double murder conviction it is very unlikely she will get it |
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The judge herself told Mackenzie at sentencing that she doubted that she would be out in 15 years and could very likely be in for life.
That was a rational for not giving her the max possible sentence which could be reasonable for someone that young AS LONG as she grows out of the obvious toxic narcissism which I am doubtful of given her family. |
| One thing that stands out, that makes me believe she wasn’t “blacked out from a POTS episode”, is the evidence of the cars shifting gears. The car went into neutral, then back into drive. Had she been unconscious and the boys put it in neutral, the car would have decelerated initially. The "black box" shows it did not. They would have never put it back into DRIVE while she was unconscious. It was 100% her putting it back into drive, whether they tried to put it neutral and save themselves or she did for some odd reason. |
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She stated she remembered turning onto that road. Then blacked out. There was no reason for her to ever be making that turn in the first place. She's not even a good liar.
She sounds like she fits in well with the other inmates. Her tough girl persona is dominant, and she thinks she's in control. She reminds me of bahd bhabie (catch me outside girl from Dr. Phil). |
It was a horrific crash. It is not unusual for crash survivors to have no memory of the accident, or events leading shortly to the accident. |