Sorry, But Mackenzie Shirilla Was Convicted of the Wrong CrimeWas Mackenzie Shirilla wrongly convicted of murder? Professionals weigh in on The Crash — Netflix's explosive new documentary — and the verdict may surprise you.A forensic scientist & former CSI, a defense attorney, and a trauma therapist all agree: Mackenzie Shirilla may be guilty of manslaughter, but not murder. In this video, we break down the key arguments:Why the prosecution may have failed — Intent and premeditation were never truly provenThe "dry run" argument debunked — Driving a public road days earlier is not evidence of murderThe science of reaction time — At 100 mph, a driver has less than 1 second to react before impactTeen brain development + THC — Why explosive impulsive behavior ≠ premeditated killingThe bench trial mistake — Why choosing a judge over a jury may have sealed her fateWhether you think she's guilty or not, the legal and forensic details of this case deserve a closer look — beyond the emotion.💬 Do you think Mackenzie Shirilla was guilty of murder or manslaughter? Drop your thoughts in the comments.Video credit:giancrstesq Via Tiktokamy_santoro Via Tiktokyourtraumatherapist Via Tiktok

Criminal Motives

Matthew Phifer

Sorry, But Mackenzie Shirilla Was Convicted of the Wrong Crime

MAY 25, 202618 MIN
Criminal Motives

Sorry, But Mackenzie Shirilla Was Convicted of the Wrong Crime

MAY 25, 202618 MIN

Description

Sorry, But Mackenzie Shirilla Was Convicted of the Wrong CrimeWas Mackenzie Shirilla wrongly convicted of murder? Professionals weigh in on The Crash — Netflix's explosive new documentary — and the verdict may surprise you.A forensic scientist & former CSI, a defense attorney, and a trauma therapist all agree: Mackenzie Shirilla may be guilty of manslaughter, but not murder. In this video, we break down the key arguments:Why the prosecution may have failed — Intent and premeditation were never truly provenThe "dry run" argument debunked — Driving a public road days earlier is not evidence of murderThe science of reaction time — At 100 mph, a driver has less than 1 second to react before impactTeen brain development + THC — Why explosive impulsive behavior ≠ premeditated killingThe bench trial mistake — Why choosing a judge over a jury may have sealed her fateWhether you think she's guilty or not, the legal and forensic details of this case deserve a closer look — beyond the emotion.💬 Do you think Mackenzie Shirilla was guilty of murder or manslaughter? Drop your thoughts in the comments.Video credit:giancrstesq Via Tiktokamy_santoro Via Tiktokyourtraumatherapist Via Tiktok