**BREAKING: The Mackenzie Shirilla Documentary You Won’t See on Netflix—Who’s Really in the Driver’s Seat?**

BREAKING: The Mackenzie Shirilla Documentary You Won’t See on Netflix—Who’s Really in the Driver’s Seat?

A new underground documentary is sending shockwaves through true crime circles, but you won’t find it on any major streaming platform. Titled “The Speed of Silence,” the independent film re-examines the 2022 conviction of Ohio teen Mackenzie Shirilla, who was sentenced to 15 years to life for crashing her car into a building at 100mph, killing her boyfriend and a friend.

Mainstream media painted Shirilla as a jealous, cold-blooded killer—a “femme fatale” behind the wheel. But this documentary flips the script. Using never-before-seen phone logs, expert crash reconstruction, and interviews with digital forensics analysts, it raises a chilling question: Was Mackenzie manipulated into taking the fall?

Critics of the conviction point to a key detail ignored by the prosecution: Shirilla’s phone showed no GPS activity or texting in the final 90 seconds before impact—odd for a “calculated” murder. Meanwhile, her boyfriend’s phone pinged a tower near the crash site at the exact moment of the wreck. The documentary also highlights a controversial jailhouse informant whose testimony was key to the “intentional murder” narrative—but whose credibility has since been shredded by prior perjury convictions.

“The media wanted a monster. They got a traumatized teenager,” says the film’s director, an anonymous journalist who goes by the pseudonym “Void.” “Ask yourself: Who benefits from a 17-year-old girl being locked away for life? Her family? The boyfriend’s family? Or a system that needs a clean, simple villain?”

The documentary is currently circulating on encrypted platforms and has already sparked a viral petition for a new trial. Law enforcement calls it “dangerous speculation.” But as one viewer commented: *“They said she wanted revenge.