Karmelo Anthony Sentenced to 35 Years After Jury Rejects Self-Defense in Fatal Track Meet Stabbing of Austin Metcalf.hl

Karmelo Anthony Sentenced to 35 Years After Jury Rejects Self-Defense in Fatal Track Meet Stabbing of Austin Metcalf

In a verdict that has reignited national debates over self-defense, race, and jury fairness, 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony was sentenced to 35 years in prison on June 9, 2026, for fatally stabbing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a Frisco ISD high school track meet in Texas. The Collin County jury rejected Anthony’s claim of self-defense, finding he knowingly caused Metcalf’s death after a confrontation on April 2, 2025, at the stadium bleachers. Anthony, who admitted the stabbing and initially told police he was “protecting myself,” faces up to 17.5 years before parole eligibility. His defense team has already filed notice of appeal.

The racially charged case involved two student-athletes from rival schools: Anthony, a Black student from Centennial High School, and Metcalf, a white athlete from Memorial High School. Prosecutors presented evidence that Anthony provoked the altercation, threatened Metcalf, and delivered a deliberate, fatal stab to the chest after being shoved—escalating a verbal dispute into ᴅᴇᴀᴅly violence. Multiple eyewitnesses described Anthony entering a team tent uninvited and escalating the argument. Defense attorneys countered that Anthony acted in reasonable self-defense under Texas’s Stand Your Ground law, responding to an imminent threat after Metcalf pushed him first. Anthony’s mother tearfully stated post-trial: “My son didn’t intend to hurt anyone… My son was defending himself.”

The jury deliberated less than three hours on guilt before convicting on murder rather than the lesser manslaughter charge. In the punishment phase, they rejected a “sudden pᴀssion” claim that could have reduced the sentence below 20 years, opting for 35 years out of a possible 5–99. Metcalf’s father described the outcome as “bittersweet,” noting, “Austin will never walk through that door again,” while prosecutors declared, “Justice was served.”

The trial’s most explosive controversy centered on the jury. After vetting from a pool of 589, the 12-person panel included no Black members despite the case’s racial dynamics. Prosecutors used peremptory strikes to dismiss all qualified African American prospective jurors, citing non-racial reasons such as being educators or expressing hesitation about convicting a “brother.” The defense raised Batson challenges alleging racial bias, but the judge seated the panel. The final jury comprised three racial minorities (including Asian and Indian), eight women, and four men. Critics argue the absence of Black jurors undermined Anthony’s right to a jury of his peers in a case rife with racial undertones, potentially tilting perceptions of self-defense claims. Supporters point to overwhelming evidence—including Anthony’s own statements and multiple eyewitness accounts—proving the stabbing went beyond reasonable fear.

As Anthony begins his sentence in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and his appeal looms, the Metcalf family seeks closure while broader debates rage over school safety, teen violence, and equitable trials. The Frisco tragedy leaves no winners—only questions about intent, bias, and the price of one fatal moment.