The courtroom battle opened with two versions of the same deadly moment.
To Karmelo Anthony’s defense team, the stabbing of Austin Metcalf was not murder. It was fear. A chaotic confrontation. A teenager reacting in a moment he believed had turned dangerous.
But prosecutors told jurors a very different story.
They argued that Anthony did not simply panic. They said he escalated the confrontation, pulled a knife, and delivered the fatal wound that killed 17-year-old Metcalf during a high school track meet in Frisco, Texas.
Anthony, now 19, is charged with first-degree murder in Metcalf’s April 2025 death. The confrontation reportedly began under a team tent at David Kuykendall Stadium, after Metcalf asked Anthony to leave an area used by Memorial High School athletes. Prosecutors described the killing as murder, while the defense argued Anthony acted in self-defense.
That single question now sits at the center of the trial:
Was Karmelo Anthony defending himself?
Or did he turn a school sports dispute into a fatal stabbing?
The prosecution is expected to focus on the knife, the fatal chest wound, witness accounts, Anthony’s alleged words before the stabbing, and whether deadly force was legally justified. The defense is expected to argue that Metcalf initiated physical contact and that Anthony acted out of fear during a fast-moving confrontation.
But the stakes could not be higher.
If convicted of murder, Anthony could face life in prison.
The trial has already become one of the most closely watched cases in Texas, partly because of the teenagers’ ages, the racial tension surrounding public debate, and the more than $600,000 raised for Anthony’s legal defense.
For Austin Metcalf’s family, the courtroom is not about politics or online arguments.
It is about a son who went to a track meet and never came home.
For Karmelo Anthony, it is about whether twelve jurors believe he acted from fear — or whether the evidence proves murder.
And if the prosecution wins that argument, the maximum sentence hanging over the courtroom is the one word no defendant wants to hear:
Life.
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