MK True Crime
MK True Crime

Mackenzie Shirilla’s Crash, Luigi’s Suppressed Evidence, and Incarceration as Intervention, with Ginny Burton

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Positively Legal hosts Mark Eiglarsh and Jonna Spilbor join the show to discuss their week as practicing criminal defense attorneys, Jonna’s disturbing tale of a fatal pothole in New York City, the re...

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>> Hello and welcome to Positively Legal.

I'm Jonathan Spilbore, a criminal defense attorney.

Shew, Maven, and founder of Jonas Spilbore Law. >> Hello, everyone. I'm Mark Eiglors. I'm a criminal defense attorney, former prosecutor, I junk law professor, I have a pickleball player,

and an all-around fan of my co-host, Janna. >> Love when you add that in. >> Today, I'm positively legal. A judge has blocked major evidence from Luigi Manjoni's state trial, and we're going to discuss that and the viral superfans

supporting press passes outside a Manhattan courthouse. >> And I am super excited, Janna. We get to talk about this Netflix documentary. It's a number two show in the country right now. It's called the crash, and the accused who was merely 17-year-old

at the time of the crash went to prison,

and we're going to discuss whether she deserved to go to prison for the amount of time that she did. >> We sure will. And later, I already know I'm going to love this guest. Jenny Burton is joining us to share her remarkable story

of how she used incarceration as an intervention and how she is working to shape public policy. Talk about somebody who literally turned her life around or would be speaking with Jenny later in the show. >> What a story.

All my goodness, what she went through from childhood to now extraordinary, so glad she's on. But right now, Janna, it's happy hour time. You got a beverage, what are you drinking? >> I don't, I have a shelter, and the thing I want to talk about

is not that happy, I got to tell you something. >> What's the, let me ask you, when you wake up in the morning, after you get done with the pigeon pose and the worry, and all of a sudden, but after you reach out to my higher power, yeah, after you do that, I do it.

>> Do you turn on the television, do you watch anything

in the morning while you're getting ready for the opening?

>> No, no, no, no, evil. No, no, why? Poison myself with all that bad news and stuff, the human race consciousness garbage, not yet, no. >> Who would want to do that, I don't know.

But I do every morning, so I have been, there was a story that I heard on the news this morning, for I left my house, that I can't stop thinking about, here is why. You do personal injury, I do personal injury,

I know we're here, we talk about criminal offense, we do a lot of that. There was a story that is so bizarre that I have to share it. So here's the story, woman, 56 years old, you could argue, prime of her life.

Driving her SUV in Manhattan last night, parks it in one of the most traversed busiest areas of the city, Fifth Avenue Midtown, Fifth Avenue, Fifth Second Street, Fox SUV, gets out of her SUV immediately falls into an uncovered manhole.

>> I don't know, the visual must be literally her whole entire body, according to an uncovered manhole.

>> I hate when I do that, yeah, what happened next?

>> She died. >> Oh, to children. >> Oh, my God, Debbie, down here, bringing that to happy hour. >> Oh, my goodness. >> Listen, this is why, I mean, it's just so bizarre,

number one, I don't even know how that actually happened. >> Right. >> Number two, of course it's, somebody's going to pay not that that's going to help anything. But it really makes me wonder, like, I'm in the city all the time.

You're going to be in the city next week.

You never ever think about something that I worry,

you know, scaffolding all the time. Do I try to avoid it? Yes, something going to fall on my head and take me out, air conditioning, what that's, you know, that's happened. I've had clients who've had their air conditioning units fall

out of their windows, and you think about that. You never think about stepping outside your car into a whole, so big that it literally sucks you up and you die instantly. I don't want to do the rest of the show. You've completely thoroughly bummed me out.

That's why to start my day with that. >> It's all in a news. I just, I couldn't do it. I mean, that's, that's, you know, it's around the age of me and my wife.

And now I got to picture her dying because I don't know what. Some city worker didn't cover it back up or, or some homeless, excuse me, I was about to say homeless. Unhoused person, I have to say that. This rude side entrepreneur is too much, might have removed the cover.

I don't know to sell for, for recycling. I don't know why that guy got off, but somebody died. That's, that's just tragic. >> That'll be a problem. If somebody removed, just in terms of liability,

although I think the manhole was the electric company,

Conned, if somebody did remove it, and Conned didn't have a notice.

Can you imagine they're fighting on whether they should pay out? I don't think they'll do that, but that could possibly happen. But here's why you shouldn't be mad at me for telling you that story.

>> You should not be mad at me because now that I've told you

this bizarre story, what if it makes you think twice and saves you from falling into a manhole? >> Maybe I just shouldn't go to New York at the end of the week. How about that, right? Just watch, just watch, where you should be watching,

where you're going anyway, when you're in the city. Don't make those people who are like, you know what? They practice into their like this, but they don't look in front of them. That's also annoying. >> Okay.

>> One other thing, just one other thing before you go to New York City, because in my pet pee, when you're walking on the sidewalk, with your wife or your kids or wherever you're there with, no, you cannot walk horizontally, like a rock band. Stay to one side because people like me, that is good around you.

>> Okay, so why don't we lighten up the podcast by talking about murder, like Luigi Manjoni? I mean, this is like the murder podcast, supposed to be positively legal, positive. Something positive, Johnna, you've bummed me the hell out.

>> We're going to find something positive, although Luigi Manjoni, just when you think

that his group of fans, first of all,

no murderer should really have fans, but we know they do. Could not be any more vile, we're going to talk about that in a second, but there was a big ruling in the Luigi Manjoni case this week. >> I'm not, I don't like it, I don't appreciate it, I sort of disagree with it, but I'm not surprised by it.

>> You do, what part do you disagree? And just fill everybody in and then you can tell us what you disagree with. >> Okay, so just to recap for those who are like Mark, and don't watch TV first thing in the morning.

>> It's not the first thing, eventually get around to it. I want to ruin my day, yeah. >> So Luigi Manjoni, he is charged in both state and federal court, in New York, in federal court. >> For the caught on camera, undeniable, 100% murder that is on tape,

because he did it on a busy city street before convention. And he killed a man named Brian Thompson, who is CEO of, I guess it's the largest, it's not one of the largest health fair companies in the country, you know.

>> John, I'm interrupting right away because I always get this question,

you know, I would have probably announced it the same way you did. People would say, oh, you're a defense attorney. Don't you believe in the presumption of innocence? It sounds like you're already convicting him, wouldn't it tell people when they say that to you?

>> I say that there is no such thing as the presumption of innocence. I know that we talk a good game, but in actuality, Mark, come on, you know, when we're representing criminal defendants, we often have to prove their innocence. It's not called that, we don't say it out loud,

but that's exactly what needs to happen, even before trial, especially before trial when you're negotiating at case with a prosecutor, who gets to decide whether or not there's going to be a deal in your case, by the way, the prosecutor's the one who does that. >> So, but I just want to tell you what I tell myself,

and what I tell others, so I don't feel guilty, right?

>> Okay. >> The presumption of innocence applies to the six or 12 jurors, assembled in that jury box, we want to make sure they can presume or believe the defendant is innocent, before they hear the evidence. It doesn't apply to the court of public opinion,

it doesn't apply to my office right now, it doesn't apply to this podcast, it doesn't apply to my house, it applies solely to court. So, we can open any time we want that somebody's damn guilty, particularly when our own eyes are seeing a video that we don't think was manufactured by AI,

and we can say, he's likely guilty, has anything wrong with that? To hell with you, we're allowed to have an opinion, right? >> That's a good answer, and I will, I don't think there's no question that the video is actually real, and the video shows him shooting this man in the back, in cold blood on a busy Manhattan street.

So, we can talk about the presumption of innocence all day long, right? >> Right, right, okay. >> So, it was suppressed, what was let in? >> So, now he had a state court hearing, because his defense attorneys who are doing a great job,

that's what defense attorneys are supposed to do.

They move of to suppress some of the evidence in case, because if you remember, when Luigi Magione was, he wasn't in custody, when he was detained in a McDonald's, when police were like suspicious that he could be who we thought he was. They overstepped basically what you can do without a warrant

in terms of virtue, somebody who uses back to committing a crime.

>> Here's what I want to talk about.

I want to know from you, the stuff that was lit in, everyone's gone, oh, all this stuff is out, who gives a crap?

What was lit in includes the gun that allegedly shot the guy,

his manifesto, if you're the prosecutors, the defensal called a diary,

I don't care what you call it, it includes his thought process that these people needed to die, these types of people, I mean it is so specific.

How is this ultimately not a huge victory for the government?

>> Oh, the government still has a case. Their case really, to be honest, isn't overly affected by this, which, so sidebar, the defensal attorneys who are very knowledgeable and very skilled know this, right? I don't think they were expecting for all of the evidence to get suppressed,

right, and you're not going to be able to suppress the video.

So what kind of victory is it when just a little bit of it got suppressed?

But the rest of it is still ample to support a murder conviction, assuming this case goes to trial or they decide to plead him to something. So it's a victory for due process, because his lawyer needed to file this motion. If they didn't, you and I would say they've rendered ineffective assistance of council, which he deserves, so you filed a motion, they went through it, they challenged the evidence,

and what remains is still to me proof, because it's due exclusion of every reasonable doubt. >> It's still plenty, but you know, before we go on, because I really want to get to his fan club, which has got my backup.

>> Can we play, we do have a thought, I believe, of the judge rendering his decision in that motion.

Can we play, is that one?

>> I find that the search of the backpack at the McDonald's was improper, warrantless search, that the backpack was not within the meeting, control or grabable area of the defendant, and further the people failed to demonstrate ex-Judeman's circumstances. Therefore, those items found in the backpack turn was search, at the McDonald's will be suppressed. However, the people have established that the subsequent search of the backpack at the station

was a valid inventory search, and therefore the items recovered at the station will not be suppressed. So as to the, sorry, the issue, I find that the defendant was not in custody until about 947 AM. So any statements before that will not be suppressed. However, as Miranda warnings were not given until some seconds after 948 in the morning, those statements made shortly before that in response to improper custodial

questions that were not merely a request for pedigree information will be suppressed. >> All right, the remains of statements about the suppressed as they either spontaneous. >> Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so look, this is a victory for our rights because for everybody's rights, right? Because even a murderer, they apply the constitution, and it is a presumptive improper search,

unless there's a warrant unless you have some type of exception. In this case, okay, they found it at the police station. They were allowed to then search it at the police station, but on scene, the things that they found get suppressed. Okay, great, just this was done. >> Yes? >> Hallelujah, yes. >> Okay, so let's move on to, let's move on. >> Oh, let's talk about it. Did you? All right, I'm going to put you on the spot because I don't

know if you did your homework and watch this documentary. So good. >> Oh, we're going to move on to the crash. You don't want to talk about the superfans? >> Oh, you know what, let's, let's do that. Yeah, you're right. We need to, I need to get upset. You're right, go. >> No, we know, we really do. >> Let's play, let's play the side, and then we'll just get upset and move on to the crash. Go, all right.

Yeah. >> Right in front of the side. That's all I want to say. Right in front of my mom. I said, I said, what is that? I don't know what you're talking about right now without you. >> Yeah, I need to know what you're talking about. >> Yeah, I need to know what you're talking about. >> I need to know what you're talking about. >> The black money, man. >> Oh. >> Standing under the front of my mom said,

I don't give it white. >> I don't give it white. >> Newly into the bear. >> I like it. >> Right in front of my mom said, what is your risk? >> Yeah. >> And the more people should acknowledge this, and it could be a perfect way. You would see anything on the grave, and it will be the profit off, killing you. That's completely called for this kind of ended in normal.

>> Disgusting, John. >> I'm not sure what you're talking about. >> I'm not sure what you're talking about. >> Okay, I get it. You got an issue with the health care industry. You got an issue with this particular CEO.

That's fine. That's what makes our country great. You can advocate all you want.

But to suggest that murder is okay because of it, what type of person does that make you?

>> Those three people are pieces of crap, and I can't understand why this man...

I don't even think it's really for what they think he stands for. If they think he stands for,

oh, we're going to effect you a change. The American health care industry sucks. Yeah, it does suck. Right? That's my health care company. It sucks. But I'm not going to go kill anybody for it. And the fact that his family has to hear this and see this, I think he's got such a fancloth, just because he's a good-looking murderer. >> I don't disagree with you. Yeah,

his shell somehow works for some of these ladies, and that's why they're justifying it.

>> All right. >> And just get a crazy. All right, let's go. >> Yeah, because this, I watch this netflix. Documentary, I told my kids to watch it. They all loved it. We talked about it over lunch. It's the number two show in the country. It's called the crash. 17-year-old,

her name is Mackenzie Sharilla. She was 17, and it was July 31, 2022. Here's what's uncontroverted.

She drove her car that contained her 20-year-old boyfriend at 19-year-old friend, Davian Flanagan, her boyfriend was Dominic Russo. She drove that car approximately a hundred miles an hour into a brick building. That is uncontroverted. The question is the car. >> Yeah, right? So far, so far, John, we're on the same page, right? Yeah, this is what happened.

Question is, why? Nobody wanted to believe at first that this was anything more than a tragic accident.

Maybe there was a vehicle malfunction. Maybe she was distracted, and so it's not something as sinister as murder. But after they analyzed everything, the car checked out. There was no faulty breaks, no bad equipment. They checked her toxicology. They did that. They found nothing

that influenced her driving. Ultimately, they found that she intentionally drove that car into a brick

building, causing the death of her boyfriend and friend. >> Without stepping on the break. >> Yes, the outbreaks. >> No breaks, which kind of begs the question, doesn't not like, if you're intending to kill everybody in that car, that would include yourself. There's no eject button there. But the prosecutor really went after her with Evangents, and I'll tell you what, if you want, we don't want to really give away the entire show. If you

watch the show, you're going to walk away. I did with a genuine disdain for Mackenzie Scherilla, for a number of weeks, you just spoiled a little brat. Let's see what she did, though. Let's come back to her character. But let's go to sought three, and see what police officers were forced to view at the crest site. Take a look at this. >> Part of what you do. Brady, there's an occupant inside. Send us a squad now. We got bus to window out.

>> Send us some more units. >> Any more units that fire us now, meet up?

>> No. >> How did he die? >> Very hot, you know. This is not a fresh accident either. She's been here for a while. Brady, we got at least two occupants in here. No, let's move in. Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. Time's three, guys. Brady, a three occupant. No one's conscious. No one's breathing.

I've lost it window out. She's alive. We got to get her out somehow. >> Heartable. >> Completely horrible. Okay. Every parent's worst nightmare. Now, but, but as you mentioned before, we watched that. Originally, I think people thought this was just sort of a horrible accident. Young kids. She probably had a lot of drugs on board. She was probably judged something that caused this. >> And they found shrumes. They found shrumes in her bag,

but none in her system. >> And then her system. >> Uh-huh. >> Right. And then, you know, I don't know. I don't think we have footage of this, but when you watch the documentary, her parents, her parents play a big role in the documentary. And while they seem like seemingly law-abiding people, when you hear them, talk about her, when you hear them talk about the crash, the accident, you no longer question why Mackenzie Sherilla did what she did,

Because Mackenzie Sherilla was raised by wolves.

she thought that she was, I don't know, beyond any sort of harm, whether she thought that she was

going to turn at the last second and just scare her documents. I don't know what she was thinking.

But I'll tell you what she's thinking now. That's a picture of her at the end of the documentary. I saw very little remorse. >> I'm very remorse. >> None. She was out. Oh, no. She was she was acting completely inappropriately, but like completely toned-deaf and havent her the crash. Whether she intentionally chose to drive into a building, which ultimately, I'm given it away, the judge found, because this was a bench trial in front of the judge and not a jury,

or whether it was some type of accident that she was responsible for, she was completely toned-deaf and pissed off all the victims, as you'll see, in the documentary. >> Yeah. I do need to split hairs, though, for a second. >> No, I had slice away, my friend. >> Even though she is unlike a

ball, and even though ultimately, she is where she belongs. I just had a little bit of a twin,

you know, murder in most states, including where this was, in which was Ohio. You know,

I'm not convinced that she was intending to kill herself and that's why, because she is

so selfish, Mark. I don't think she intended to kill herself, and that she wasn't intending to kill herself. And what she was doing, how could she be deemed to be intending to kill the occupants if she wasn't intending to kill herself? I know. >> You were breaking up with her, her long-time boyfriend wanted nothing to do with her. I don't know what happened in the car. That's what all the victims want to know. What exactly happened, but we know he didn't want anything to do with her.

There was evidence that a couple weeks before she had said that she was going to do something like this.

There was a witness who testified to that. But here's what got me there. Two pieces of evidence

that convinced me, and I think convinced the judge, one that was not in the documentary. It was in an A and E special. We have the clip I asked him to put it together, but this one was. Let's start with number two, the thing that was in the documentary. You, you see her making a safe turn. Very safe, very safe, deliberate slow, and then she halls ass. 97 miles an hour, no breaks, but it wasn't a straight road. It was a curved road, and if she did

suffer from pots like her mother claimed, and thus would have passed out, like they tried to alleged erroneously, then the vehicle would have gone off the road earlier. She wouldn't have been able to navigate that curved road until she got into the wall. That's number one. Did you want to respond to that one before I move to the second? No, you can move on. I'm with you. Okay. All right.

Number two, a police officer. I think it was a detective went to visit her in the hospital

right after this happened, and they recorded what was said on audio. And she has this conversation with her mother that sounds like pig Latin gibberish. I want you to hear it, and then we'll get into what it was. Let's go ahead. The line we're investigating is an aggravated behavior of homicides times two. I do want you to know that a lot of people are coming to us and reporting things. And so usually, usually the most accurate information we're going to get

is confirmed with their tests. Okay, so I learned it around this. He said he had a seesay. He said he said he's like, she speaks to her mother in a unique language. He said he had a seesay. He said he It's a gibberish or a distortion of the English language. It's kind of like piglet. Can we tell the police I had a seizure? Can we tell the police something like that? One of the first things that the girl said to the detective was instantly, "Can't you just take my driver's license away for ten years?"

Can we tell the police? Can we tell the police? Can we tell the police the police?

Can we tell the police the police? Can we tell the police the police? Janna, did you even see that? Come on, Janna. Janna, two things. Can you take my license? Hold on one second. Take my license for what? She didn't do anything wrong in her mind. Full shit. She knew what she had done.

And the other thing was, let's just say I had a seizure. They were setting it up from the beginning. Come on, Janna. That should have been in the Netflix. I know. You heard it here on Positively Legal. What planet are you from that? You can create a whole little weird non-language language

To communicate with your parents who are wool. I raised you. That's bizarre. Right. You know what's what? One quick thing, and I know we're going to have to move on. But you know how very recently, "Oh God, what is the name?"

There was a kid who shot up a school.

Oh, what? Yeah, I forget the name. I was at an embossed and crumbly. Ethan crumbly. Right. Right. Yeah.

For the first time ever, we saw parents prosecuted

Right. Tonduct of their children. We should see it again. Oh, not. The fact they're different. They had made the gun accessible. It was a whole different thing.

And I didn't even agree with that prosecution. But to be continued. Yeah. I agree. Preview our guests because I'm excited to hear from her. Oh, God. Me too. I cannot wait to be speaking with Jenny Burton.

She is a systems change agent and author of The Gabriel Plan. She's going to join us. You're not going to want to miss her story. Stay tuned. We'll be right back. Welcome back to positively legal.

And we are so privileged right now to have joining us. Jenny Burton. She's a systems change agent. She's host of The Modern America Channel. She's also the author of The Book The Gabriel Plan. Jenny, first of all, thank you so much for joining us.

We are extremely grateful for your time. Thank you. Yeah. Thank you guys so much for having me. All right. So we got to start at the beginning.

And I'm going to go on record and say you never had a chance, girl.

I feel so sorry for what you went through.

Although, I know that that's what made you the person you are today.

But let's start as a child. What the heck happened? Yeah. Arguably, it's exactly what was supposed to happen. So I was born and born for such a time as this. And I was born to drug addict parents.

I mean, in the long and short of it. And though I compared my life to TV shows, got out of different plans for me. And so how bad was it? I mean, they were obviously not doing what they were supposed to do.

But what were you witnessing in the household?

What were you subjecting yourself to unwillingly?

Because that wasn't your choice. No, definitely wasn't my choice. My house was rated when I was four years old. My dad was taken a prison shortly after that. My mom, her life sort of cascaded into despair and destruction.

I think it felt good to her in the beginning.

Because you know, we're all building the plain as we fly it. And so suggesting that my parents should have done something differently would suggest that they had a different skill set than what they had. So I think that they were functioning from the foundation that they were skilled in.

And unfortunately, when you put drugs, chaos, love and children in the same space, you get exactly what that kind of mixture would suggest. And you know, what I got was a crash course in strengths really. And a real, real college education in the, I think the real existence of humanity without, you know,

the luxuries that we have been conditioned to participate in here in the United States. And so for a long time, I thought my life was happening to me. And I didn't realize that it was happening for me. And today, I had just had a very different experience. And you know, I'm so grateful for the entire thing.

My mom and my dad both died in the same way in which they lived, which was in, you know, the outcomes of long-term drug and alcohol abuse. And, you know, there are a plethora of things to go along with that. And like I said, I'm just grateful for it. We're in day the ones who got you involved in drug use.

Not just because of their behavior, but they actively got you involved. Tell us about that. Yeah, my mom did. She introduced drugs to me. I was seven years old.

I think it made it easier for her to participate in some of the things that she was.

In order for her kids not to say anything, she introduced them to us. And, you know, though I did not like the way that they felt. What I realized was that they provided an escape from the chaos that was very frightening. And, you know, eventually just like any other condition that we struggle with as human beings. They became patterns of behavior that provided me opportunity to, you know, move around in the environment that I was in.

And they served me until they didn't. Were there any good childhood memories? Oh, I mean, yeah. And let me just say, like, I think it's really important to know that.

Because outsiders tend to perceive addiction as just a place of desperation a...

People wouldn't stay in those conditions if they didn't provide some sort of escape. So, you know, it wasn't like just just this terrible experience the entire time. There were definitely things that were hard and very frightening, but, you know, yes, I mean, I have six brothers and sisters. We got the opportunity to explore and be free. I mean, I grew up in the 80s.

There was definitely violence and fear that came along with all of the life experiences. But, you know, I have a lot of fond memories that I can reflect on.

Even with my mom, who was my first abuser, et cetera, et cetera, you know, we grew up together.

And just the way that I see it now is just very different than the way that I saw it when I was in the midst of it. I had an expectation for a long time for my mom to do something that she didn't have the skill set to do. And, you know, and again, I just want to talk about gratitude. I'm really grateful for it today because what I get the opportunity to do today is teach people how to live differently than their patterns of behavior, if that makes sense. >> Yeah. >> Yeah. >> Yeah. >> I got to ask you, sorry, Mark. I got to ask you something because your story is is remarkable and so much different than people who suffer very similar to you, right?

Not everybody breaks free from addiction and turns out to change themselves and change the world for the better. But you did. So, despite being addicted perhaps at a young age and growing up in that kind of chaos, there had to come a moment or maybe it was a series of moments.

That truly changed the way you operated as a person and is there, and I know it's not a secret sauce, but can you describe for our listeners can case somebody's going through the same thing?

What is it that inspired you to change and come out of that chaos in such an inspiring way? So, I've answered this question so many times in the way that you set it up just caused me to sort of have a different experience with how I'm going to answer.

So, first of all, I was tired. You know, every single person I think in the world has behaviors that they don't like, the outcomes of, but they don't know how to change them.

I was just really tired and, you know, I, the moment that I was arrested last time, I just knew that something needed to change and I realized, I realized something really simple, which was, I just have to do the opposite of what I've been doing. And because I realized that I was the author of my story that the change was going to have to come for me. For a really long time, I had an expectation for systems and governments and providers to have the answer for me, but how could they have the answer when they had never been there?

How old were you when you finally made the shift?

Yeah, 40. I just want to say that I think it's really important to say this, law enforcement was a blessing that intervened to help propel that shift.

So, I was 40 years old. Okay, and you had been arrested how many times? And I say this with love, it's just part of your story, you know? Yeah, just so you know, my life is an open book, so for a long time, I've walked around essentially naked on the stage of the world, everybody knows my story. So there's no area you cannot go into, I just want to say that right now, but yeah, I don't know. I've been arrested a lot of times. I served three different prison sentences. I've done a number of different jailstays, juvenile justice days, for a long time, though, I expected other people to, you know, give me what I needed to be able to exist differently.

But when I got arrested at 40, I was just, I was sick of it. I was sick of myself, and I knew that something needed to change. So, yeah, what did you get?

Had you gone to rehab any of the times as part of any previous sentences?

Sure, yeah, I did, and I just want to say, I'm just curious, what's the most amount of time that you're able to get under your belt because maybe that helped when you finally made your decision at 40?

A lot of percent. Now, let me just say, I've been to treatment a couple of times. I've been to prison three times prior to this experience, and each of those times I gathered more information, right? So, what these industries do is they provide a one-dimension of what is necessary, which is separation from the destructive path. So, in saying that, it gives a person in the past, not today. It's a very different system today. It gave, or gives a person the opportunity to be removed, long enough to get clarity.

Every single person that I've ever interacted with in any of these spaces, wh...

Now, I just want to say this, if a person is not practicing new behaviors, the likelihood of those behaviors changing when they exit out of the other end of those institutions, whether it's treatment, whether it's mental health, whether it's shelter, whether it's prison, or Joel, if they haven't been practicing those behaviors, the likelihood of those behaviors changing is very slim. We, as a species, gravitate toward familiarity.

So, when things get harder and comfortable, and you have absolutely no idea how to navigate or access things that you want to do to change, you're probably not going to do that.

So, the things that I realized at 40, mind you, I was searching for death. I was sick of it. I thought I was a failure in all areas of my life, but there was a different thing that happened for me when I was arrested, and I became clear, and you know, and that's like there's this whole spiritual component to, you know, everything that's happened, but you know, I woke up. And that's what happens pretty consistently with most people that end up in these environments when they're not put on drugs. And I'm going to tell you that today, when a person is separated, they're immediately put on drugs, whether it's through detox, whether it's a treatment program, whether it's prison.

They're immediately put on drugs, and when you cannot access the deepest recesses of yourself, because you are continued to participate in, you know, chemical escape.

What happens is, is people don't ever find that place of clarity.

So, you don't believe in suboxone to reen people off of now. Go cold turkey and then, yeah.

I'm not, I'm not zero tolerance, but I can tell you that I am abstinence based. So when we have blamed the pharmaceutical companies for the problem of opioid addiction, are we all really so dim that we think that the pharmaceutical companies are actually the answer to the very problem we're suggesting that they created.

Isn't there business model exactly the same? How does any drug dealer make money? Just like any business, we turn customers. Right. They don't profit even some of the rehab.

I'm a fan of rehab of a lot of clients have gone through some of them successfully some of them not. They tend to make more money if they have more clients and they have more clients if people remain addicted. And can you talk to this part of it? And that is, you just said, you were sick and tired of feeling the way you were feeling right the pain. I'm doing what you were doing and living the way you were living was just far greater than the pain of change. Let's, I get that. But how can a person use somebody else any professional get inside another person's head to make that switch to flip that switch because I find when I have clients who are not successful in rehab.

It's because they are going through the motions. They're saying what the counselors want them to say. They're just doing it. They're sneaking around behind their backs. They haven't been motivated. They're not sick and tired of feeling that way. And if we can bottle whatever it takes to change that in a person's brain.

I think we have a lot more successful people who are rehabilitated. But how do you get there?

Well, is that some really important things? First of all, our entire system currently has focused on long-term management.

So back in two, that between 2013 and 2015, we had a massive shift. We saw the DSM 5 change. Everything became diagnosable and prescribable. So when that is the focus and I can tell you right now, I said it on a federal briefing. I think it was the homelessness. It was either the homelessness, or the treatment, I've got some friends. You know, in DC that are involved in a lot of the stuff. I do consulting on different policy stuff with currently the state of Tennessee's Department of Human Services.

But I was able to sit in on some HUD stuff too that showed the timeline between 2013 and 2015, which made a lot of sense to me because I was working in the behavioral health industry at the time. So we changed addiction treatment to substance use disorder with the EO, the briefing that I sat in on what I saw was a complete rebranding with Pharma at the helm of some of these changes. So we have decided that homelessness is a behavioral health problem, so it's Medicaid reimbursable, it's diagnosable. The shift is to move everybody towards some sort of medication, it's a treatment. So I just want to say that.

How old do we bottle that? Well, first of all, we have the wrong people of the table making decisions when you don't have lived experience who have overcome. I just want to identify that very distinctly.

Lived experience who has overcome and not drank the cool aid and bought into ...

If you're not sick, I'm not funded. We've seen a lot of problems with funding and how funding is directly associated with these problems with people remaining sick, right?

So what we can do to bottle stuff, which is what I'm doing inside of prisons today, I'm developing a model that's very intentional.

And we have to, when a person is removed and clear, are we ever going to have a hundred percent efficacy?

No, we're talking about human beings who like to change a way that they feel, but what we do is during those periods of clarity, we assess deficits. So we take a look at many life domains of the individual who is like, you know, receiving some sort of service inside of these industries, whether it's homelessness, social services, behavioral health, incarceration. The model has to look the same everywhere. And what we have to look for are the outcomes that we seek, not inputs and outputs of the agency that are serving, but the outcomes that we seek with the individuals that are being served.

How do we, as a system, equip and enable individuals to become the strongest version of themselves? Well, we have to first address from lived experience perspectives and engagement.

Because I'm sorry, when you have the 25 year old academic who just came from suburbia who has never once in their life had a challenge outside of what their parents could solve for them and we're sending them into these arenas. These are arenas, these doubles dens, which that's exactly what we're doing. We indoctrinate them and we turn them into these advocates that are progressing the very industry that is contributing to the destruction of human lives, and that's exactly what we're doing across the country and any.

Can I ask you a question, let me just ask your question.

Is there any way that you can force change upon someone unless they believe their behavior has become intolerable to themselves?

Yeah, I watch these programs intervention. Most of the time I don't think it tells the story because a lot of these people I think, you know, relapse because the parents are forcing it on them or friends want them to get well. You know, it doesn't the individual like you, you worked because you said I've had enough. How do you force people to get a detreatment if they don't want it doesn't work does it? Well, I bet. Yes, it does actually so if there are 15 people that hang out in a house or live in the same place in 12 of them are mountain climbers and the other career exposed to these people for a long enough period of time people acclimate.

They're going to start hiking or something. They're going to start eating better. They're going to leave.

That's just the way that we function as a species. Yes, you can. You remove people from the destructive path when you're and I don't know one drug addict that doesn't commit some sort of crime.

We've decided that possession of narcotics that have the ability to kill people is not a crime. I think that's a stupidest thing we've ever done as a country.

When we when your civil liberties and crotch on mice of liberties as a community member, then you have put yourself in a position to be removed from society until we address your problems. And so when that happens and we immerse people in an environment where change is actually occurring, we're going to have a much higher likelihood over time that people are going to acclimate to that change. Most people are using drugs and participating in certain behaviors because those are the patterns of behaviors that they learned and navigate those environments.

People want to have integrity. They want to have self-respect. Again, are we going to have 100% efficacy? No, but this is what I can tell you. I teach a process inside of prisons and my current numbers are really solid out of 51 people that have been released only one has recidivated out of that one that's recidivated. He has made his way back to the program because though we participate in familiarity in behaviors that have helped us to escape challenge in the past. What we really want is we really want to be good people. We really want to be parents to our kids. We really want to have a job where we have autonomy in our life. We really want to have our own place to live.

But when you have a system that is feeding people the poison that keeps them suspended in their sickness because we have a gigantic industry that we've called the help industry that is really dependent on these people being sick. Changes are going to shift. So when somebody is out screwing up and doing crazy stuff, it's all responsibility to hold them accountable, whether it's jail, whether it's treatment, et cetera, et cetera. I want to ask you about that stat because that's extraordinary out of 51. Then he found his way back. Tell me what the formula is for the 50. What are you doing? What on a daily basis are those 50 doing to keep themselves off drugs and keeping themselves on the right path?

Well, they've realized that the things that they were doing in their life wer...

The formula is assessed deficit, address deficit, teach accountability, have people recognize that they are the author to their own story. And then once they have stabilized the internal foundation because our solutions are not external.

Problems that we're trying to escape from exist within ourselves. So I've developed process and curriculum that I teach inside of prison and we rigorously go through this process for a period of time.

Before I introduce them to real opportunities. So I bring a host of network relationships from around the state into the prison prior to them releasing right around graduation. And what I do is I introduce the guys that I teach into relationships and opportunities so that they can sustain the goals that they have set for themselves. And so it's been successful. Guys don't want to let go of the positive things that they've developed, and they actually respect the guys that's looking back at them in the mirror. So a huge part of it.

When you're working this steps, I think they also like you incorporate the 12 steps into this. I'm just curious. I know that that. No, but I mean, I am an I am a 12 step absence face person. So of course, I am also a Bible believing person. My program is people ask me all the time. Is it faith based? I said, no, but it's based in faith. But so are the 12 steps. So what I provided is an opportunity for people to look at themselves because not everybody wants to go to 12 step, not everybody identifies as an addict. What I identify is change. I am a change program, the program that I teach is a change program.

I also am a lover of Albert Ellis, who is the creator of rational and mode of behavior therapy. So this has a lot of radical self acceptance. You know, we've decided that, oh, my life is supposed to look perfect. There's absolutely no human being on the face of the planet that's perfect. Our escape really exists within accountability, personal accountability and self acceptance. I am okay, no matter what it is that I've done. And there's actually power in my past and the things that I've done that I can't ever get away from that I continue to try to hide from, but wherever I go there I am. So is 12 step apart of it, 100% because 12 step is a part of me, but the process itself really has to do with personal accountability.

I want to jump in because we want to take a look at some of your success stories, which you're describing is the Gabriel plan. This is the system that you are changing. And I want to call for five be because we can hear from some of your students themselves. Let's roll that. Nobody put us in prison, not the police, not the judge, not the prosecutors, you know, and the damn show not the victims. So, hey man, until you start taking accountability, you're doing wrong, you know, there won't be no change.

I can't deal with problems until you name them and you know how to deal with them. And all the other programs that I've taken, I never really, no one really told me, hey, this is how you should deal with this in this situation or whatever.

This scenarios and things people are kind of private about, you know, they don't want to necessarily talk about it anymore, you know, it's it kind of feel like I'm, I'm at the end of my sentence, I'm ready to just be done with that. Let's just move forward. But there's a level of healing that I was able to get, I believe, from being an out that that helped me become a better person and help me see how others may view me and the way that I do things and how it affects others.

I've seen even within myself, but for these other individuals, I have seen guys just, you know, take more approach at like going after the better things in life and then not material things just the peace of mind, right.

Relationships be, you know, strengthening and making a men's, I just had a guy talk to me about literally making a men's with his mom after so many years because of, you know, whatever bad blood was there. I was actually in and the individuals that you may not see that don't participate no longer in out in the sense, but I'm going to tell you this, it carries on the way they conduct themselves the way they help in the individuals and things that are nature let alone the way to treat themselves.

I feel like a lot of individuals that not all are in it, but that stick with it, there's self-worth has definitely increased.

What kind of change do you think this could mean for their release?

The people who come from the program are not looking at their counselors and ...

They're not looking at DOC and saying, "Well, how much money do you need to give me to live here?"

They're looking at themselves and saying, "What can I do to improve my situation?

What can I do to provide for my family? What can I do to provide better environments for my children, my wife, my brothers and sisters, my parents?"

It's amazing to me over the years, how many times a guy comes to prison and, you know, he's got sick parents.

And he only wants to do his take care of him, but he's stuck in prison and then he gets out and he has that old mentality of, "Well, what's DOC going to do for me?" Seeing that these guys are taking ownership in their own futures and really recognizing that they're in control of that and not relying so heavily on DOC to do it for me, I think that's going to make all the difference in the world. Jenny, I hate the fact that we have to rub up with you, but we do. I just want to say that so those people that you interviewed were part of your out program,

which stands for overhaul, unrelenting, transfiguration, which is incorporated into your Gabriel plan, and I have to just tell you something I have to tell you this.

Listening to those men talk about how they transform Jenny, this would work for people who aren't addicted to anything.

The transformation within them is something that I think a lot of people, without addiction problems or issues, without addiction issues, could also just become the best version of themselves. That's friggin' a mince. I love you for that and I applaud you for that. I would hope that people don't have to be incarcerated to benefit from your plan, from your systems change, from your wisdom, from your experience. What if people do want to work with you and learn more about the program? Is there a way that they can do that, Jenny?

Yeah, well they can email me directly at [email protected]. You can visit the website, ohyphenut.org. You can find me on social media at the Jenny Burton, and that's with Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram.

I just want to say, and I think it's really important to mention this, is that the population that you just witnessed, they predominantly become our homeless addicted population.

The people that have been released are people who have been cycling in and out of incarceration for many years.

We're breaking cycles because we are focusing on intention and the outcomes that we seek. Jenny, thank you. We are extremely grateful for your efforts and all that. We'll call it "harbleness" and I put that in quotations that you grew up around led you to do God's work. I thank you for all that you do. Thank you very much. Thank you, Jenny. Thank you so much. All right, coming up in just a moment, Jonathan, I go off the record. Stick around. Welcome back to Positively Legal. It's time for Mark and I to go off the record.

But before we get to that, there's something I've been dying to discuss with you, Mark. And it's from my favorite movie. Oh, we all know what that is at this point. My cousin Vinnie. Oh, yeah. Thank you. All right, so let's watch a clip. One of the many and hopefully we'll show more during the season. But let's take a look at this one clip and we'll analyze just how real, how likely this is to occur.

Go ahead. This is Riley, when you sort of defendants, were you wearing your glasses? Yes, I was. Over here, dear.

I think there's no levels of thickest if you got true.

I don't think it's over 60 years. Maybe 10 times. I'll be ready for a thickest set. Oh, no. No, I think they'll kick. Maybe we should make sure. Let's check it out. Now, how far were the defendants from you when you saw a mentor in the sack of suds? About 100 feet. 100 feet. Would you hold this please? Thank you. Sorry. Excuse me. Excuse me. Sorry. Sorry. Still confident. Okay, this is 50 feet. That's half the distance. How many fingers am I holding up?

Let the record show that counselor's holding up two fingers.

Yana, please, huh? Oh, Yana. Sorry. What the hell are you? Mrs. Riley and only Mrs. Riley.

How many fingers am I holding up now? risky. Full. What do you think now, dear? I'm thinking of getting thicker glasses. Yana, a great scene. I loved it when I watched the movie, but how realistic is that? Would you ever do anything like that in court? Please tell me now. That is worse than asking a witness a question you don't know the answer to it.

If you think about it in real life, it's sort of like the if the glove don't fit, you must quit like that whole demonstration. That was calculated at least. No, that was bad.

It would never happen. It's silly and young lawyers who see that and want to do stuff like that, please don't.

It's not good in the real world. All right. We're going to rant a little bit. We're going to rant a little bit. Yeah, who's going first? I guess I am. That's okay. You're in my rant. You're in my rant today, Mark. Really? Not, not in a bad way. Okay. So in case you haven't heard, crime con 26 is taking place in Vegas next week and the whole group of NK True Crime Contrients is going to be there. I'm really looking forward to it because well, Vegas, baby. My games are crafts, roulette, and poker. Texas hold and to be exact, winner lose their fun to play and can keep you busy for a while. If the free Margarita is don't make you stupid, but the most fun I have in Vegas is at the slots.

The high roll and high risk progressive slot machines where you can burn through your highest paid barrel legal salary in a matter of minutes. Or you can spin those wheels to win a ton, or you can spin those wheels and win tens of millions of dollars with one lucky pole. Have you ever wondered how much of a windfall it would take to change your life? One million dollars.

My number, a hundred million bucks after taxes, of course. That's what I consider FU money.

And if I won FU money on this trip to Vegas, here are a few things I would and would not do.

First, I would call my office and get everyone a raise so big they would wonder whether I met and married Elon Musk in the Elvis Chapel.

Next, I'd round up all my MK True Crime contributors and treat them to a skies the limit spending spree at the shops at Caesar's Palace. Okay, so yeah, I anticipate Margarita goes turning me down. He'd be all like, I was just there with the Kardashians. You go ahead, I'll catch up. After the rest of a shop till we drop, I treat my co-host Mark eyeglass to a champagne and waggu's steak experience so luxuriously expensive. The prime minister of Japan would feel compelled to frame me on Facebook.

But the most important thing I would do is not tell a single soul that I want.

Not because I don't want to be bothered by my six cousin went to remove hitting me up for a loan, but because I would want to bless as many people as I could without them ever needing to ask. When I was in law school working three jobs to pay my rent, I got so behind on parking tickets that I had to ask my grandma to help me out before my car got towed for like the tenth time. Dude, where's my car? She mailed me a letter and a little bit of Joe. Not enough to fully solve the problem, but enough to buy me one good meal before I went to debtor's prison.

The details of the note don't matter. It's the effect that I'll never forget. I swore that day that when I had enough money to be a blessing to others, I wouldn't fact be that blessing to him ever was in need before they ever had to ask.

I've kept that promise to myself numerous times since then, and it feels pret...

So when I win that FU money in Vegas next week, there's going to be a whole lot of people who will have my slightly frugal overly judging grip. I'm out of thank for it.

And then there will be Mark Eyeglarge, who just might have the best beer fed but massage cow he ever ate.

That's how they make one go fabulous. All right, that was awesome. Now I'm going to rant and I got to get serious for a second.

Becky Hill, I'm going to say it again. Becky Hill, the mere mention of her name, raises my blood pressure. She was the clerk in Colotin, South Carolina, and she's the one who the highest court in the land in South Carolina found tampered with Alex Murdoch's jury. And just so we're clear, Alex Murdoch was convicted of killing both his wife and his son shot them both. And I agree with the higher courts ruling that there was plenty of evidence to prove that he was guilty.

But what Becky Hill did was revolting. She tampered with that jury. She said things to them like, don't be fooled by Alex and this decision shouldn't take too long.

She did it because she was promoting a book and if he was found guilty, the sales would go up a book by the way that she plagiarized portions of.

So I was very eager to find out when the news hit this past week that the convictions were overturned that they were now going to go to trial again. Great financial and emotional and physical tax on everyone. I was curious to see what did all of her crimes yield.

I mean, perjury, obstruction, misconduct, surely they threw the book at her. Three years probation. I immediately thought the wrong P word.

What she did didn't just screw with Alex Murdoch and all the people of South Carolina and all those like myself who followed the trial and wanted due process. But she undermined the constitution and what it guarantees. We would like to believe that people are afforded fair trials.

What she did she knowingly did. She intentionally did. She willfully did it. And I think she got off way too light.

What do you guys think? Mark. Yes. Fabulous. Couldn't agree with you more. I'm still upset by it. I know. Very slap on the wrist. Absolutely slap on the wrist. But for now, we have to bid everyone and do. I want to give a very loud thank you to Ginny Burton, our guest and to Michael host Mark. I glars. And thank you for joining us. Remember new episodes to positively leave all drop everyone's day. I hope you choose to have a wonderful week.

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