Serialously with Annie Elise
Serialously with Annie Elise

400: Part 2: The 5 Biggest Bombshells Netflix Left Out of 'The Crash" | Mackenzie Shirilla

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Today we’re breaking down the 5 biggest bombshells Netflix left out of the Mackenzie Shirilla case — including disturbing witness statements, alleged prior threats, missing toxicology questions, and b...

Transcript

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Hey true crime besties, welcome back to an all new episode of Serialis League.

Hello hello hello and welcome back to an all new episode of Serialis League. With me Annie Elise, now you're noticing I'm sure that this is a bonus episode. It's not the typical Monday or Thursday episode. It is a bonus episode and here's why. On Monday I released a deep dive into the Mackenzie Cherilla case.

Now this is a case that I first covered years and years and years ago before I went to

the trial, again after the trial, but then as I'm sure many of you have seen, there is a new documentary on Netflix called The Crash. It is polarizing everybody is glued to it.

There are a lot of conflicting opinions out there about, did she do it?

Did she not? It wasn't an accident. What happened? Was it a medical emergency? All these things.

So I did a deep dive on Monday where I went through, you know, we review footage, phone calls,

timelines, receipts, screenshots, everything that Netflix basically left out, okay?

But then I was remembering, okay, a couple of years ago. Back in 2023, I was, I said, I want to reach out to me to participate in a documentary on this case and with that, they sent me the police report, different reports from the prosecutors office, all these different things and I saved all of it. You can see here, I have pages and pages and pages and pages and I had, like, my notebook

with, you know, that I was scribbling in feverishly, all these things.

So I was like, you know, I want to just go back to all of that really quick because I remember

they're being like, these are really clear things in my opinion that were black and white that illustrated not only that she absolutely did this intentionally, but a lot of information about the parents. I vaguely had remembered some like sex work activity. There were a lot of things.

So I went back through all of my documents over the weekend and earlier this week. And when I tell you, we know Netflix likes to leave things out or they don't like to, but they have to for legality reasons, also, you can only fit so much in a 90-minute program. But they're already in the deep dive from Monday. There was so much information that I put out that Netflix didn't include, but then I was

like, wait, there are five buckets, five bomb shells, I should say, that Netflix left out. The biggest ones, in my opinion, that I feel like gives so much more context to this case and what the truth really is. I'm talking more information about her parents. Her blood sample from the morning of the crash, being disposed of by the doctor, being thrown

away, no drug test ordered on it, but actually like being completely disposed of. Actual past behavior allegations from her friends, which some people spoke out in the documentary. In my opinion, the majority of them were trying to protect her, but like actual testimony from friends where they verbatim say that she was constantly threatening self-harm that, you

know, reference the toxicity of the relationship with Dom, and then also her own dad. In the police report, which don't worry, guys, I'm going to read these documents to you like verbatim, but her own dad in the police report saying that McKenzie did this intentionally. And we also are going to talk about that whole sex offense section that was, once again, in the whole like police write up, but didn't make it to Netflix for whatever reason.

So today, I want to go through the biggest things that Netflix left out. And I want to start with the parents. I have seen some stuff on social media since people have watched this documentary, questioning the parents' remorse, their accountability, them trying to just protect their daughter, all of these things.

But there are a few things, and I have my notes here, the police reports here, but there are a few things I want to go through this, go through with you on this.

Because I found this information pretty interesting, and again, I think it provides context.

So I want to share it with you guys. So at 9.05 a.m. on August 1st, which was the day after the crash, police reports states that her mom had said to the officers that her husband said not to say anything until they have a lawyer. We also did hear that in the documentary.

But adjacent to that, she also said immediately, this was the day after the crash. She said that she was worried about the public's reaction on social media.

That was her primary concern within 24 hours of the first responders arriving to the

crash scene, finding out that these two boys were killed. Her daughter still in the hospital, and I want to read this for you verbatim. So this was at 9.05 a.m. and it says, I'm going to just, I have my highlighted section here.

I'm just going to, you know, go forward a little bit.

So it says, I explained to her that once McKenzie is discharged from the ICU, I would

be interested in interviewing her. She mentioned that her husband told her not to say anything until they have legal representation, which, okay, fine, fair. I encourage her to pass my contact information along to her attorney. So we agreed that I will call her next week to check on McKenzie status.

But then Natalie expressed concern about the public's reaction on social media. As if that is like the biggest deal right now, and the reason I bring that up is because it all goes into perspective, and let me just continue on here, because actually maybe, let me see, I'm going to just look at my notes. You know, actually, I guess I'll just talk this about talk to you about this right now.

We did see in the documentary how well McKenzie was recovering within just literal days

after the accident two days after the crash, I don't want to say accident, two days after the crash, as a matter of fact, when brands were reaching out to McKenzie on her social

media, being like, hey, can we use this photo, can we do this?

And her mom was responding as her, being like, oh my God, we would love to collaborate. Like we've been trying to contact you, did it, did it, in addition to that. Her mom was also allegedly like soliciting LA based modeling agencies, trying to get her daughter signed to a modeling agency while McKenzie was in the hospital because she was starting to get some attention on social media.

This was two days after the crash. Again, that's the priority. So you have her saying, we're so worried about what the public's reaction is going to be on social media while simultaneously trying to get her daughter signed with different brands and modeling agencies, it's so gross that that is where the priority was.

And that's where the focus was. Additionally, McKenzie, then after this conversation took place, an officer went into the hospital

room, started just speaking with McKenzie very lightly, not a full interview or anything

like that, and McKenzie had told the officer that she left Rosie's house before the crash, not Paul's. Now, maybe that was just her memory, being foggy, who knows, absolutely. But what I thought was interesting is that her mom immediately interjected to end that conversation before McKenzie could even finish.

She just cut her off and like cut it off, stop talking, which again, I understand you want to protect yourself legally, you don't want it to say anything that is self-incriminating, but it's just a lot of things that when you layer them together, it starts to illustrate in my opinion, a pretty uncomfortable situation. So then later that same day, one hour or once, I one day after the crash, the mom called

the police around 8 p.m. asking for McKenzie's cell phone. She said that she needed her phone so that she could access McKenzie's Snapchat to get a

pass code. Now, look, I don't know how Snapchat works, I thought it was four messages

and photos and videos. I didn't know that you was like, how's a pass code in there or anything like that, but she said that she needed access to Snapchat, and she called multiple times every single day asking the police for McKenzie's phone back so that she could access

Snapchat, which my first thought went to why she had to access Snapchat, is she trying

to delete stuff, is she trying to hide stuff, and let me read this for you, and I'm just going to read snippets of like these documents that are in the police report, but it says, "Sargent nip called me to let me know that McKenzie's mother Natalie called the station requesting access to her daughter's cell phone. She specifically wanted access to the social media app Snapchat." She said it was to receive a pass code. I told Sargent nip that the

phone was a material piece of evidence and that it will not be released until I apply for a search warrant, which at the time was with APA under review, and then it goes on to say how she requested multiple times, kept calling back and like was like a dog with a bone and would not let it go. Then the following day on the sixth of August, so now seven days technically after the crash, her mom called the police and she reported that there

were mean people on social media who were blaming McKenzie for the crash and alleging that she had killed Dom on purpose. Again, more of like what's the public's reaction going to be? Now calling the police being like, "They're blaming my daughter all over social media." They're saying that she did it on purpose. They're blaming her just once again, like, read the room. Read the room right now, given the situation. The following

day, it was set to be one of the services, the service for Dom, and apparently McKenzie was being very combative in the hospital. She wanted to attend this funeral. They advised her you are not well enough, you can face time in. It's not a good idea, but she was so determined that she nearly signed herself out AMA against medical advice. Officer, it was so combative as a matter of fact in the hospital, and that officers ended up being called and dispatched

To the hospital.

able to talk her into staying, but she became very combative officers ended up being called. And that kind of takes me back to a different incident when officers were called on McKenzie, because in this police report, and let me pull this up, it was from back in 2020, so a little bit, you know, a year or so before the crash, and psych was called to her house because she was

threatening to take her own life. Which if you remember, in the documentary, her friends, her

parents, they say she was net, she never had those ideations. She was happy, she was great,

she had a beautiful life, but the cops were called, and psych was called, because she was making threats. And let me go here, it's said, oh, we'll hear back here from the hospital room. It's said, two officers responded to the room where Sheryl was being treated, because she was being combated. The officer stood by and they didn't take any action, but it was added all these things. Female will not be true. Okay, so then here is the 2020 incident. It says, the call was

psych related. They requested assistance from SPD. McKenzie was reportedly threatening self-harm. She was, and the whole world, like she was threatening to take her own life, I'm just trying to

like censor the, you know, the S word on here, because you two likes to flag me. She was not

transported for an evaluation. During the call, SFD requested the SPD officer's respond, so the

fire department requesting that the police department respond, but no reason was given. The following disposition was then entered by the dispatcher into the call. It says, female will not be transported to the hospital. Parents do not think that her threats are real. They do not believe that she will hurt herself. So there is, in fact, a history of her making these threats against her own life, and we're only scratching the surface here, like just wait. So she, I was social means being

combative, the 2020 incident, okay, all these things. Another thing you may have noticed, if you watched the documentary, is that her parents were basically like defending McKenzie to the ends of the earth, that she was a great kid, even though she was like rip and bomb hits at 17 years

old every day, but like she was a great kid. She never gotten to trouble. She was responsible,

even though I also will talk to you about potential alleged sex work in a minute here, but defending her to the death, right? McKenzie could do no wrong. She's an angel. Well, here's how much they were defending her to the death, okay? Well, McKenzie was still in the hospital. As officers were wanting to interview people, get statements, get a some sort of, you know, pulse check on like what was going on, what was the energy like, what's her history with

dom, like what's the relationship, like the mother was trying to silence her friends, telling them not to cooperate with the investigators, not to speak with them, and not to share details. In fact, at one point, too, which I'll read here in a minute, when the officers were talking to Daviance family, they had said, like, hey, have you talked to too landin, other as known as Bubba, which was McKenzie's best friend, Rosie's boyfriend. They're like, have you talked to him? And they're like, oh, yeah,

he actually requested to come walk Daviance bedroom the day after the crash to get some sort of peace and closure. And they have to say, well, he's not cooperating with the investigation. He won't answer, he won't let us interview him. He won't talk with us. Then they further went on to say, that, well, Bubba, landin, was at the hospital, McKenzie's dad won up to him and said, help me save my daughter, saying that, you know, not, I don't know, like, that was after the mom had said,

to all the friends don't talk to the police, all this stuff. And let me read this for you. It says, so next time, choir, whether Daviance best friend, landin, Bubba Turner, had been in contact with them. They both, and this is Daviance parents, okay? They both stated that immediately after the crash, he requested and was granted permission to walk through Daviance bedroom as a means of seeking closure. When I informed them that he was not cooperating with the investigation, they mentioned that

landin had told them about an encounter that he had with Steve Cherella at the hospital. He was visiting McKenzie and, according to landin, Steve looked him in the eye and asked him to help save his daughter.

Now, this, I think, you can read into it a couple of different ways. One, why isn't he cooperating?

The dad is also asking him to help him save his daughter, which I would say is not a passive aggressive statement, but like a statement with a significant undertone to it. And he wanted to go walk the bedroom to seek closure of his friend, yet he's not willing to cooperate with the investigation and answer any questions. That doesn't make sense. How are you? If you're so torn up about your friend's death, so much so that you need to walk his bedroom to seek closure immediately after and

You're asking his parents for that, why are you not forthcoming with the poli...

information? Just doesn't make sense, right? So I already talked to you too about how like the priority seemed to be, replying to the brands, contacting the LA modeling agencies, what the perception

is going to be on social media and her friend and her parents basically defending her to the death.

Mackenzie runs the show, in my opinion, 1,000% through and through with her parents. I think that she steam rolls them, yells at them, kicks her little feet, stamps her feet, and gets her way every time, because there are also direct quotes within this whole police report from the time that she was in the hospital, where she was yelling at her parents, yelling, curse words at them, telling them, get the hell out of my hospital room, get the fuck out of here. Don't talk to the police without me

at 1.2 when the police brought what they had recovered from the car. There was like $162 in cash or something like that, and they gave it to her parents, and she's put that money in my bag, put it in my

bag. That's what you're concerned about when you're laid up on a hospital bed with a neck brace,

and like, you know, completely bedwritten, but that's how she was. She was physically, not

physically, verbally agressive toward her parents. Spitting commands, doing things like that. This is not a typical 17-year-old girl who has rules occur few, anything like that. She has entitlement, and her parents, in my opinion, enable the entire thing. They're not yelling at her. They're not, here when she held her dad and had to get out of my room. He left. He screamed out of the hospital room like a little fucking pussy. Like, it's absolutely mind-boggling. Then when the parents are

talking to the police, don't talk to them without me. She is the, you know, grown-up, apparently, in this situation. It's unbelievable. Meanwhile, remember how, if you watched the documentary, how her parents, again, were saying, she was a good kid. She was responsible. We had nothing

to worry about. No, she owned your asses. She owned you, hook, line and sinker, and got away with murder,

not upon, not an expression, literally. Well, I guess she didn't get away with it because she's

locked up, but you go what I mean. So now let's get into this part because in this police report, her dad said that Mackenzie did this intentionally, and I actually'm going to just read this for you, verbatim. So it says, according to both officers, Metro Health Police Sergeant Adam Doyle asked them about the status of this investigation. Sergeant Doyle further added that during Mackenzie stay at Metro Health, her father told Sergeant Doyle that Mackenzie intentionally drove her

vehicle into the building in an attempt to take her own life. Sergeant Doyle's statement, though, was not documented in the only MHPD report that I was able to obtain involving Mackenzie. And I'm going to read this page for you as well. It says that when they were, oh, sorry, Sergeant Doyle proceeded to recount the incident with Steve Sharilla on the day that Mackenzie was trying to leave the hospital to presumably attend Dom's funeral. Remember, when she was

getting super-combative, she was trying to leave. They had to call the officers in. He said, Sergeant Doyle said, quote, "Mr. Sharilla stated to him that they had to keep her in the hospital, because she's already tried to kill herself and she killed those two boys." Now, why this little tidbit wasn't entered into Netflix. I don't know, maybe because it was recollection, and it wasn't entered into an official police report. I have no idea, but

I think that that's pretty major, right? That the father, within the first few days of this

crash-taking place, acknowledges that Mackenzie was trying to take her own life and that she killed these two boys, and that it was intentional. That's a pretty huge piece of information, right? Seems like something you'd want to know. So now let's move into the next bucket, okay? And we're going to talk about the drugs, and we're going to talk about the blood testing, or lack thereof. I should say. So let's talk about that night and the timeline, okay? So we know that she went to

Kelly's around 10 to 10, 15 PM. There, she and Dom reportedly were asking for acid, you know. They said, "Do you trip?" She said, "No, they were looking for acid." She and Dom then said that they wanted some, and they left. So they arrived at Paul's house, and I should say in between that period of time, because they left about 20 minutes later, and there is a window of time about like an hour and some change before they arrived at Paul's house. There was apparently another house

in the neighborhood where they did sell that, or you could, we'll get that, whatever. So they then arrived at Paul's at 12 AM. Paul was really tired, so it won a clock, he won upstairs, and he went to sleep. He said that he woke up around 2 or 3 AM, came downstairs to grab some water. He saw McKenzie sleeping, but the rest of the friends were still awake, and they were watching South Park. Then, Dom starts sending his final messages. At 253, he texted his dad, between 1241

330, he was sending text messages to his brother, his friends, his mom, and h...

"I love you." And then at 241 AM, he tried to face time his friend Blair, which Blair later said,

that this was very unusual for Dom. So the group then leaves at 530 AM, and we know that the

crash happens and all that, but here, I'm sorry, I'm going to sneeze, here is what's really frustrating. There was no drug testing conducted on her initial ER blood sample, because the physician canceled the order. The ER did not even test for drugs, and I'm going to go to this page, and I want to read this again, verbatim. So, to do, to do, to do, to do, okay. I called Metro Health Records Department to inquire about the life of flight report and the toxicology report.

I spoke with, I'm going to leave it blank, who said that the life of flight report will be included among the documents requested in the search warrant. Debbie, sorry, whoops, okay, I didn't put a last name, whatever. Debbie further stated that no drug testing was conducted on McKenzie's blood, because a physician canceled the order. I called APA Troop to inform him that according to the Metro Health Medical Records Office, what was going on, and that the ER did not test the blood

for drugs, then a blood sample from several days later, the third of August was taken and remained

at the hospital and sent for testing. So, that initial blood sample, while she was in flight, while she was getting help in the ER, was discarded of based on the directive of the ER physician. Why? Who the hell even knows, right? So, and oh, here's another thing that's really interesting and frustrating. The sample from the 31st, the day of the crash that was discarded and disposed of, was disposed of after a search warrant had already been served for the sample. So,

let me read this to you. It says, "I called Metro Health's Pathology Department, and I was ultimately transferred to Core Lab. I spoke with Blank, who told me that the only blood samples that they have from McKenzie is from August 3rd. She explained that McKenzie's blood from July 31st was disposed of per their policy, and it was disposed of on August 5th. It's worth noting that the search warrant for the blood was served to Metro Health on August 4th. The audio

recording of this call was also preserved under the search warrant. So, then further down it says, the MH Core Lab disposed of the sample collected on July 31st on August 5th, or the on August 5th, which was one day after I served them the search warrant. So, why was this blood sample disposed of after receiving a warrant that they had to turn it over? It kind of reminds me, if you're familiar with the Karen Reed case, when all of them were order to preserve their phones,

and they were served the order, and then the next day or whatever they start breaking them, and throwing them in the dumpster, and getting rid of them. It's like, "What is going on here?" I don't know what's saying that there are some sort of conspiracy or collusion or corruption or anything like that, but it makes you wonder, like, "What happened here? How did we fail this so badly?"

So then, and I know that then there was the blood from the third. That was tested, and it showed

only THC in her system. I believe that shrooms and acid stain your system longer,

then a couple of days, so I would imagine that those still would have shown up on the drug test, but then again, I don't know. Also, there were reports that they were heavily drinking that night. That certainly would not show up on a blood test. Days later, that's even why so many people when they get pulled over for a potential DUI demand a blood test instead of a breathalizer, because by the time you get to the station, and they have someone come in and perform the blood test,

you'd have so word up, and likelihood of your blood alcohol level being lower is much higher. You have a better chance, so she could have easily been intoxicated and wasted that night.

We have no idea because the blood was discarded, and they didn't collect the new sample until the third.

So, that's annoying. Let's see. Okay, going back to the drugs and how we don't know what drugs were consumed that night, what happened? We know they were looking for acid. We also know that there was a conversation of the group collectively, potentially taking mushrooms together.

I believe with good reason, but they've never been convicted of this, so I just want to be careful

what I say, but I'm sure you guys are all coming to this conclusion as well. That Mackenzie and Dom were drug dealers. They posted selfies all the time wearing all of this designer stuff. There were some selfies in this police report. I should pull up the photo where they have like stacks of hundreds and fifties and all of this money. And we know that at the scene of the crash, not only did they find 6.91 grams of mushrooms, but they found a scale. Nobody has a

Scale in their personal, unless you're measuring things out to deal.

count in your macros, but it didn't really seem like that. So what was going on? And in fact,

which this was not included in the documentary, Rosie, the friend who was also defending Mackenzie

to the ends of the earth, she had said that they had talked about potentially taking mushrooms together, but that they all decided not to. But what she conveniently left out in her segment on Netflix was that she and Mackenzie were texting the night of the party before Mackenzie even got to Paul's house. And Rosie had texted Mackenzie with a list of people who wanted to buy drugs from her. So I mean, hello, the writing is on the wall. You don't have to be

you know, a wizard to see what's going on here. But it's frustrating because all of this information, it does give context as to who Mackenzie was as a person, her character, her lifestyle, and there's more. So now going into her past behavior and past threats, we heard that from her

parents and from some of her friends that she never had a thought about self-harm that she had a

great life. She was happy. She was looking forward to the future. She had design or stuff. She had nothing

to be sad about. She was in love with Dom. Well, sure enough, after the crash, while this whole investigation was going down, there were several public outcries that not only completely contradict that, but also illustrate that Mackenzie was an extremely reckless driver and a furious driver whenever she got pissed off. So much so that a mom of one of her ex-boyfriends contacted the police during all of this, saying Mackenzie had actually threatened to not only take her own life,

but to kill Dom in the past as well. Paul, one of the friends, spoke with police and said that

he refused to get in the car with Mackenzie because, quote, "She was a bad driver and, quote,

got into fights while driving." Rosie, the BFF, writer-die who didn't want to say a single bad word about Mackenzie, had also told Paul, quote, "Don't go in the car with Mackenzie. It's not good." In the documentary, they also referenced the incident that happened two weeks approximately before the crash, where Mackenzie and Dom were driving, they got into a fight, Dom called his mother saying Mackenzie is acting crazy. She could he called a friend,

hence, I believe it was saying you need to come pick me up like Mackenzie's threatening to crash,

she's acting insane, all of these things. When he called his friend to come get him, the friend spoke to the police and he overheard Mackenzie saying, these exact words, quote, "I'm sorry, not her." Oh yeah, sorry, I just, I wrote this wrong, saying she will crash this car right now. And let me pull this up a little bit because I want to read this for you. What's page in my own? Oh yeah, well this goes, sorry, I skipped a page, this just goes back to

the dealing situation, because it said Rosie and Mackenzie on the night of July 30th, prior to Mackenzie's arrival at Paul's house in the exchange, Rosie had listed the name of people who were interested in purchasing controlled substances from Mackenzie. Bam, right there, black and white. Okay, so now, as we're talking about this incident from two weeks before the crash, or maybe even, yeah, like a week and a half, she mentioned the incident from a week before the crash

where Mackenzie threatened to crash the car that she was driving while Dominick was inside it with her. And let me see, there's one more page here. Okay, to, to, to do, let me just fast forward here. Okay, so she's threatening, he, he scared, he calls his mom, we know that he said she's acting insane like, I need, I'm going home, whatever. However, at the very end of the documentary, her parents still advocating for her innocence, bring up text messages, saying, no,

Mackenzie actually was saying that Dom was the aggressor. He's the one who grabbed the steering wheel. He's the one who was threatening to drive them off the road. Well, those text messages didn't come from Mackenzie until after he had already called his mom saying what was going on to which, by the way, his mom said, when he called her, he was acting, he was totally calm. He was fine. He was an angry. He was saying that Mackenzie was the one who was combative, saying, like, she's scaring me. The

friend, also, who went to go pick him up, said he heard Mackenzie say that she was going to crash the car right now. And so any, and that Dom was calm and nothing, like, it was completely contradicts everything. So later that afternoon, after Dom gets picked up, Mackenzie then text Dom's mom, saying, can you come get Dom? He just grabbed my steering wheel on the highway. He's trying to spit out my car and hurt me. There's more and more text. And she said, he lied to you about it. I can't

calm down when he just tried to end my life, which, in my opinion, and look, gaslighting happens on

Both sides.

back and forth, a lot of breaking up, a lot of hatred. He cheated on her. They were breaking up and

game-act together every other week, right? Even though Rosie said it wasn't like that. It was, according to all of the friends and, you know, 180 pages and there are 518 pages of this police

report. But I think that she was so desperate because she also did have a connection with the

Dom's mom. They talked regularly. I think she was just trying to make sure that she wasn't the perception was that she wasn't the aggressor in this. I think this was all a manipulation tactic, being like, he lied to you about it. It was really him. Well, that completely is contradicted by his tone of voice when he called his mom. What the friend heard you say in the car when Dom

called him. But once again, trying to make it seem like she is the, that she is the victim and

all of this. Friends also were quoted in these police reports saying that she, quote, threatened taking her own life all the time. And one friend even said, you know, it's all the times that she threatened suicide. Mackenzie was also on anti-depressants since middle school. But she reportedly stopped taking them because she didn't like the way that they made her feel. So could that

be contributing factor to her aggression, to her anger, to her ideations. Certainly possible, right?

Another thing that I thought was really interesting. In addition to everybody saying that she has threatened self-harm and also has threatened to crash the car while Dom's in the car with her. And all of these things, she spread all the time. She was a horrifically reckless driver. We already

went through some of the friends saying how they would never get in a car with her. They knew

better. They advised other friends and ever to get in a car with her that she was just a bad driver. She also, though, would record herself on Snapchat multiple times going over 90 miles per hour. Some, some, even 100 miles per hour with her left foot. So constantly pushing the boundaries and taking chances. It's not like this was a one-time thing. And again, why didn't this get talked about that she would regularly speed and even document herself speeding? We know she documented

herself smoking weed and driving, but why wasn't it called out that she documented herself going over 90 miles per hour, 100 miles per hour with a left foot? Come on. Another thing that was left out

that I think shows her type of behavior, her entitlement, her, you know, untouchable type attitude,

is that a week prior to the crash, she and Dom actually broke and entered into a church. This church had been for sale and abandoned for about five years, but they broke inside. They were taking selfies. This is all in the police report. There was about $85,000 worth of damage apparently inside this church. None of this ever went forward, obviously, given the situation and what happened. But they were hoodlums. You know, I don't know if there's a better way to

describe it. But like dealing drugs, smoking weed, partying, driving, recklessly, driving, impaired, breaking into churches, all for these selfies. And it kind of gives, as I especially if you saw the documentary and watched her own Snapchat videos and all that stuff, it kind of gives like euphoria vibes a little bit. That's show where it's like the jewels on the face. All you care about is how you look, what you're wearing, their relationship is kind of like a

matty innate dynamic, actually, if I'm being honest. And it just, it's like glamorized in their lives. They, it's almost like they think they're living in a TV show or something. Another thing that I think speaks very highly to her character or lack thereof is that on September 17th, 49 days after the crash. She went to a kid cutty festival and was partying her face off and posting about it. And so happy. And we saw the thing about Halloween and all of that. But didn't see anything about that.

How just, you know, a little over a month later, she's out partying, doesn't show remorse to me. It doesn't, and I get it. You move on with your life at some point. But like, I don't know, a month and a half after this horrific accident when you were in the hospital for a big chunk of that too. It's like really, really. And now I want to get into the alleged sex offenses. And I want to read this verbatim because I don't want to have anything that gets, you know, misinterpreted or room for error, anything like that.

But it seems as they were looking through Snapchat history and as they were looking through her apps, investigators discovered that she was receiving quite a bit of money through cash app, which could have been substance dealing, obviously. But then there were also photos that were reportedly being exchanged on Snapchat from her to other users in exchange for money. This is all alleged, okay?

I'm going to read to you what was in, you know, the report here.

the investigation into suspected sex offenses committed by McKenzie was for the purpose of confirming

or dispelling the possibility of her having been victimized and forced into committing unwanted acts.

Detective Glover and I reviewed approximately 31,000 pages of material containing 93,000 text message exchanges between McKenzie and Dom beginning January 2020, until July 30, 2022. The messages were obtained pursuant to the search warrant from McKenzie cell phone. Messages indicated that McKenzie voluntarily engaged in suspected sex acts with other people likely in exchange for monetary value without being forced to commit those acts.

So she meaning Dom wasn't the one facilitating all of this. She did this on her own.

Kind of like an only fans, but through Snapchat, sending videos, photos, getting money in return.

However, this was a point of contention in her and Dom's relationship. Here's some text messages I'm going to read to you. In this one's from January 25, 2022. So, you know, seven months before six months before the crash. McKenzie wrote to Dom, you realize I'm just going to get a sugar daddy and start selling feet picks and I'm going to be doing just fine. So this is really your last chance to hand my right to hand write me an apology or fix this or we're really

done. Then in another text thread on March 5, 2022, Dom wrote to her, yeah, you let it do fuck your feet for money like six months ago. McKenzie replied, we were broken up. McKenzie added, we were broken up and it was feet, LMAO. Once again, then leave. He's pissed because she, I don't want you to have here but let a guy have sex with her feet. You can illustrate that in your mind how it works. I remember when I was in high school, it was called like

"titty fucking." That's what people did, but apparently, "feet fucking" is now something.

But she's like, "Yeah, we were broken up." And it was feet. So who cares? And if you have a problem, leave, that's what she's saying. Then they continue to argue about it well into June. On June 8, 2022, Dom wrote, "Yeah, I love you, but last time you started hanging out with her, you literally let her sell your body to that random dude." Dom added and she hooked you up with the dude. McKenzie replied, "We were broken up and it was my feet. Do you think about, oh,

do you think about it more than I think about it?" Dom wrote, "You ran off and became a prostitute." McKenzie replied, "Because I personally don't think it's bad, but if you do and we are together,

then I won't do it." Dom wrote, "You could never tell your family you were a pro."

McKenzie replied, "Because it's only my business and it's not soliciting or, you know, the people are a prostitute, whatever." So clearly, he didn't like what she was doing in the many cycles and which they were broken up and she would then get money from somebody from other men instead of him because he was the one who was bankrolling her life for the most part, but during the breakup cycles, she would sell photos, images, or apparently hook up with men, allegedly for money.

Then on June 5th, there was another message where Dom wrote her and said, "Kenzie, there is always going to be problems if you're hanging out with someone who got a dude to fuck your feet for money." So this was a problem all the way up until a month before the crash, something that they thought about regularly. And again, if you see all of her social media activity, she lived on portraying herself with this lifestyle, these designer goods,

you know, her and makeup perfect, sexy poses, all these things, that's what it's seeing,

and you know, ripping long heads, like that's what she prioritized. Now, this is just my personal thing that I noticed when watching the footage and I've been saying this for years. In the footage of the crash itself, and it's very difficult to tell because it is dark obviously, and there are certain flashes and lights that are used that show things and like we know light bounces off of windows and all things like that. To me, and this is just my opinion, you guys

watch the footage yourself, if you want to rewatch it, it's horrific to watch, but to me, it looks like when she is taking that corner very slowly in control before then gunning it. It appears that Dom is in the passenger seat and that he's on his phone because I think what I believe I see is the light from his phone facing upward. It's a bright screen. It's completely dark car, but then a bright screen in his hands. I would argue that they were arguing about something.

She was pissed. He was on his phone. She was asking who he was talking to or something, and because she was totally in control around the corner as that happened. And then from there is when she guns it, goes, doesn't hit the break, and hits the wall. And like we have heard from so many friends,

Many accounts in the past, she consistently drove recklessly.

miles per hour, even bragging about it and documenting it on her snapchat, and she would regularly,

and I'm okay, not regularly, but she oftentimes threatened to crash the car with Dom inside of it. So if there is still any room for doubt of whether this was intentional or not, I hope I just kind of closed the loop on that. And the majority of what I've been seeing out there from people who have either followed the case or watched the documentary, most people believe that she is guilty through and through, and that her parents are obviously just as bad and they enable her.

And hello her dad, look at her dad said she did it in the, according to the police report. So I don't think that she has a shot within a peel, but I've seen crazier things,

cough cough, Casey Anthony. I think for her though, she'll never admit to anything,

even if she's not going to, even if the, even if the peel doesn't get approved, and it's like, okay, now you can tell the truth, there's nothing more that you're going to face, even if somebody

said right now, I'll actually, never mind, I'm not going to say that. But if there were no repercussions

for her to tell the truth right now, I still don't think that she would, because I still think in her mind, perception is all that she cares about. And I think that she doesn't even really have, you know, a remorseful bone in her body, even the way she showed up on this freaking Netflix documentary with her hair up in this weird updo and talking a different way and things like that, it's like all she cares about is what people think about her and hoping and thinking that she is the victim in

all of this. And it blows my mind and why her friends were so obsessed with her and still hold

through that like, she's the victim in all this, even though their statements to the police department in several interviews completely contradict that, it's like, okay, girl bye. So that's where I'm at, I just wanted to throw these things out there, food for thought for you, curious to know what your

thoughts are on this. Sound off in the comments below, do you think that she will get an appeal?

I know one of them was denied. Do you think that she's going to try to appeal again? Do you think she will get an appeal? Do you think that she is innocent? Do you think this was an accident? What do you think? I obviously have made my mind out, but curious to know what you guys think. All right, thank you guys so much for tuning in to another episode of cereal, Leslie. I might have more for you in the next couple days as I keep, you know, unraveling all of these things.

So make sure that you subscribe if you're watching this on YouTube, press that subscribe button right now. And if you are listening to this on your podcast, I know you can't see what I'm doing right now. But if you open your podcast app on the episode, just go to the top three little dots in the right corner and press follow so that you are following the show and you do not miss future episodes.

Other than that, I will be back with you again very, very soon. And you should go listen to the

deep dive that I did earlier this week because I play so much footage in that jail calls, interviews, and do a full deep dive of the entire case. So go check that out. All right guys, until the next one, be nice, don't kill people, don't drive like a maniac, and don't be a McKenzie sure I'll help you. [Music]

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