Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon
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Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi

Chilling prison phone call between Mackenzie Shirilla and her mother. In 2022 she k*lled her boyfriend and his friend by intentionally driving into a wall at 100MPH.
At 3am on July 31, 2022, a 17-year-old Mackenzie Shirilla drove her boyfriend and his friend down a quiet dead-end road in Strongsville, Ohio, accelerated her Toyota Camry to 100 miles per hour, never touched the brakes, and drove straight into the brick wall of a building. She survived. They didn't.
Dominic Russo was 20 years old. Davion Flanagan was 19. Both were pronounced de*d at the scene. Shirilla was unconscious and had to be extracted from the wreckage.
Police initially treated it as an accident. Then they watched the surveillance footage.
The judge who later convicted her described it as "chilling and tragic" and said: "She had a mission, and she executed it with precision. The mission was death."
In August 2023, Judge Nancy Margaret Russo convicted her of four counts of m*rder after a bench trial, calling her a "literal hell on wheels." She was sentenced to 15 years to life.
She has appealed her conviction three times. Every appeal has failed. Her earliest possible parole date is October 29, 2037.
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Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi

This cat came in with some serious attitude. Even before he opened the carrier, she made it very clear she was not happy about any of this. The screaming, the biting, the full-on battle mode — she was not playing.
I would’ve been absolutely terrified trying to groom a cat like this. But this groomer stayed so calm and patient the whole time, even while she was doing her best to fight him.
He just kept talking to her like it was no big deal and gave her the funniest little nicknames while she was losing her mind.
Some cats really do have main character energy, and this one was fully living in it.
Have you ever seen a cat that had this much personality during bath or grooming time?
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Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi

July 26, 2020. A beach near Collingwood, Ontario.
Sixteen-year-old Jamey Ruth Klassen was supposed to be enjoying a quiet family vacation beside the icy blue waters of Georgian Bay.
Farther out on the lake, a man named Christopher Robertson had taken his kayak out alone for a peaceful paddle. Then the kayak filled with water and flipped.
Suddenly, he was stranded in the freezing bay, clinging desperately to the overturned hull while shouting for help.
Jamey didn’t hear him directly.
What she heard instead were strangers nearby calling 911, panicking about a kayaker who had disappeared beneath the surface and wasn’t coming back up.
Most teenagers would’ve stayed on shore.
The water was brutally cold. The distance looked impossible. Lifeguards and paramedics were already being called. Waiting would’ve been understandable.
Jamey never waited.
She ran toward the water and dove in.
Alone, she swam nearly 600 feet through Georgian Bay — the distance of two football fields — pushing herself farther and farther from shore toward the empty kayak floating in the distance.
By the time she reached it, Christopher Robertson was gone.
Then Jamey looked down.
Through the clear Canadian water, she could see him lying motionless twelve feet below on the lake floor.
She took one breath.
And dove.
The cold tightened around her body instantly as she reached the bottom. She grabbed Robertson beneath both arms and forced herself upward, dragging his unconscious body back toward the surface.
He wasn’t breathing.
His body hung limp in the water.
Jamey refused to let go.
She turned him onto his back, balanced his head against her shoulder, wrapped one arm across his chest, and began swimming him toward shore using only one arm and her legs.
Every second became harder.
Her muscles burned violently. Her lungs screamed. She had no formal lifeguard certification because the pandemic had canceled the courses she planned to take that summer.
Still, she kept kicking.
Then fear hit her.
Jamey realized she might drown beside him before reaching shore.
Exhausted and losing strength, she used the last thing she still had left:
Her voice.
She screamed for help.
A nearby paddleboarder heard her cries and rushed across the water. Together, they lifted Robertson onto the board while Jamey, shivering and exhausted, swam the remaining distance alone.
Onshore, police officers and paramedics immediately began CPR.
Moments later, Christopher Robertson started breathing again.
He survived.
Nearly a year later, Jamey Ruth Klassen received the Carnegie Medal — North America’s highest civilian honor for heroism. Out of millions of people, only eighteen recipients were chosen that year.
But Jamey barely spoke about herself afterward.
Instead, she used the scholarship money from the award to attend nursing school at McMaster University, quietly continuing the same instinct that had driven her into the freezing water that day:
If someone needs help, you go.
No hesitation.
No spotlight.
No waiting for someone braver.
Just a sixteen-year-old girl who saw a stranger drowning… and decided his life mattered more than her fear.

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Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi
Jackie Mahon retweetledi

Little girl hits her dad with the ultimate weapon: big eyes, tiny voice, and “Can we go get donuts pleaseeee?”
Next thing you know, dad’s grabbing his keys while still pretending he was gonna say no.
She’s got him wrapped around her little finger tighter than a donut glaze. And honestly? Same. These are the moments that make being a parent look like the sweetest job in the world.
Could you say no to that precious little face?
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