Watch: Gypsy Rose Blanchard Speaks Out on Backlash After Making Joke About Her Mom’s Murder
Gypsy Rose Blanchard is sharing her take on Mackenzie Shirilla’s crimes.
After Netflix’s The Crash saw Shirilla—who was convicted of two counts of first degree murder for a 2022 car crash that killed Dominic Russo and Davion Flanagan—speak out for the first time, Blanchard shared why she doesn’t believe the 21-year-old will get an appeal, or even parole when the time comes.
“I don’t think the documentary did her any favors,” Blanchard told TMZ in a podcast that aired May 29. “Now, I can say, I don’t think she’ll get early parole and this is why. So, the parole board takes into consideration behavior in prison, but most importantly remorse and family.”
Indeed, Blanchard explained that the families of Russo—whom Shirilla was dating at the time of the crash—and Flanagan have the power to keep her from receiving parole. (Shirilla was convicted on four counts of murder as well as four other crimes in 2023. She received a life sentence in prison, with eligibility for parole after 15 years, according to the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor.)
“If the victim’s family writes against her parole, she will automatically be denied,” Blanchard noted. “I’ve seen it happen time and time again with different women that was [sic] in my prison.”
As Blanchard put it, “They prioritize the victim’s family above everything.”
For her part, Blanchard—who received parole in 2023 for her charge of second-degree murder of her mother Clauddine “Dee Dee” Blanchard in 2015—also believes Shirilla has not fully grasped the gravity of her crime.
Courtesy of Netflix
“It’s going to take a lot of work on her part,” the 34-year-old considered. “She’s going to have to do a lot of extensive therapy. She’s young. And it’s not going to sink in until 20 years from now.”
And while Shirilla expressed she was “not a monster” in the Netflix documentary—which hit the platform May 15—Blanchard reasoned that “she needs to grow up and take accountability.”
“Remorse is something that maybe is not coming natural right now because maybe it’s something that she hasn’t dealt with internally and emotionally,” she added, “but it’s going to hit her like a train and when that happens, she needs to take those steps to do what she needs to to make amends with the victims’ family [sic] and it’s on them if they want to forgive her.”
Although Shirilla was found guilty of murdering Russo and Flanagan, she maintained in the documentary that it was not intentional, pointing to her diagnosis of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome as the cause for the crash.
“I’m not saying I’m innocent,” Shirilla said in the documentary. “I was a driver of a tragedy, but I’m not a murderer.”
For a deeper look into Shirilla’s crime, keep reading…
Courtesy of Netflix
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Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction
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