The murder trial was supposed to focus on one fatal moment under a school track-meet tent.

Instead, it has become something much bigger.

Karmelo Anthony, the Texas teenager accused of fatally stabbing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a Frisco high school athletics competition, is standing trial for first-degree murder. But outside the courtroom, another controversy has followed him from the beginning: a defense fund that reportedly climbed past $600,000 and turned a local homicide case into a national argument over race, self-defense, justice, and public sympathy.

There is no confirmed report that Anthony faces additional criminal charges for raising money or for “turning a murder case into a movement.” The charge at the center of the trial remains first-degree murder. But the fundraiser has become part of the public outrage surrounding the case, with critics arguing that the money transformed a teenager’s death into an online cause.

Inside court, Anthony’s lawyers are not arguing about the fundraiser.

They are arguing fear.

The defense says Anthony acted in self-defense after Metcalf initiated physical contact during a confrontation under the Memorial High School team tent. Prosecutors say the evidence tells a different story: that Anthony pulled a knife and stabbed Metcalf once in the chest after the dispute escalated. In opening statements, prosecutors called the killing murder, not self-defense.

That distinction could decide how long Anthony remains behind bars if convicted.

If jurors reject self-defense and convict him of murder, Anthony could face up to life in prison. But his legal team’s path to a “sooner than expected” release depends on persuading jurors that the stabbing was justified, or at least that the evidence does not support the most serious version of the charge.

The defense has already pointed to the size difference between the teenagers and argued Anthony feared for his safety. Reports from trial say Metcalf and his twin brother were about 6-foot-1, while Anthony is 5-foot-8 and 140 pounds. Prosecutors, however, are expected to emphasize that Metcalf was unarmed, that Anthony allegedly attempted to discard the knife, and that deadly force may not have been justified during a tent dispute at a school event.

That is the legal fight behind the public fury.

To Anthony’s supporters, the defense fund represents a teenager’s right to fight a life-changing charge with serious legal help.

To Metcalf’s supporters, it feels like a reward system built around the person accused of killing a high school athlete.

For Austin Metcalf’s family, the courtroom controversy is secondary to the only fact that matters: their son went to a track meet and never came home.

For Karmelo Anthony, the trial is now a battle over whether jurors see him as a frightened teenager who reacted in fear, or as the person who turned a school argument into a fatal stabbing.

The money may have made the case louder.

But the verdict will come down to something colder: the knife, the wound, the witnesses, the footage, and whether twelve jurors believe fear can explain what happened under that tent.