Mackenzie Shirilla’s Father Steve
Claims Netflix Documentary Twisted His Phrases
… After Being Positioned on Go away From Educating Job
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Steve Shirilla is pushing again on the firestorm surrounding Netflix’s documentary about his daughter … insisting his feedback about marijuana had been twisted and other people have misunderstood what he was attempting to say.
Test it out … Steve joined us on “TMZ Live” after being positioned on paid go away from his Ohio Catholic faculty instructing job following backlash over “The Crash” … centered round his daughter, Mackenzie Shirilla, who was convicted of homicide within the 2022 crash that killed her boyfriend Dominic Russo and pal Davion Flanagan.
A serious level of controversy has been Steve’s remarks within the doc about Mackenzie smoking marijuana as an adolescent … however he says that interpretation is off base … telling us the filmmakers condensed days of interviews into a couple of quick sound bites and neglected necessary context.
The doc exhibits him addressing Mackenzie’s marijuana utilization … during which he says, “I don’t have a problem with her smoking dope. If you’re going to smoke a drug, that’s the one I believe you should take.”
However he tells us he had no concept Mackenzie was allegedly smoking whereas driving earlier than the lethal crash … saying if he’d recognized, he would’ve “had huge issues with it.”
Steve says the diocese advised him they’d been “inundated” with complaints from involved mother and father after the movie dropped … and that is what led to the go away.
Past the controversy surrounding the doc, Steve continues to defend his daughter’s innocence … arguing prosecutors by no means proved intent or premeditation, which he claims is critical to justify a homicide conviction … saying, “There is zero evidence of intent and prior calculation in this case.”
Mackenzie was convicted in 2023 after prosecutors mentioned she deliberately drove practically 100 mph right into a constructing … and she or he’s now serving life with parole eligibility after 15 years.