Shock in Court: Karmelo Anthony’s Defense Wants Jurors to See His Fear — Prosecutors Say the Evidence Shows Murder

By U.S. Crime Desk

The courtroom battle has reached the question at the center of the Karmelo Anthony trial:

Was he afraid?

Or was Austin Metcalf murdered?

Anthony, now 19, is on trial in Collin County, Texas, for the fatal stabbing of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track meet in Frisco. Prosecutors have argued that Anthony committed murder when he stabbed Metcalf once in the chest under a team tent. The defense says Anthony acted in self-defense after being physically confronted by a larger teenager.

Now, after the state rested its case, Anthony’s lawyers have begun trying to make jurors see the moment through his eyes.

The defense argument is simple but difficult: Anthony was not hunting for violence, they say. He was scared. He was outnumbered. He was under pressure inside a crowded tent. And when the confrontation turned physical, he believed he had to protect himself.

Prosecutors have spent days attacking that version.

Student witnesses testified that Anthony refused to leave the tent and that he escalated the confrontation before the stabbing. One witness, according to trial reporting, said Anthony was the aggressor and rejected the idea that he acted in self-defense. Prosecutors also presented video, bodycam footage, witness accounts, and evidence tied to the knife recovered near the scene.

The state’s theory is that Austin Metcalf was unarmed and that a shove or confrontation at a school track meet did not justify deadly force.

That is the line jurors must now decide.

The defense may argue that fear does not need to look calm or rational in the moment. It may argue that Anthony’s size, the speed of the confrontation, and the physical contact from Metcalf created a situation where he believed he was in danger.

But prosecutors will likely return to one hard question:

If Austin Metcalf was unarmed, why did Karmelo Anthony use a knife?

The trial has already become one of the most closely watched cases in Texas. It has drawn national attention because of the teenagers’ ages, the racial tension around the case, the more than $600,000 raised for Anthony’s defense, and the emotional testimony from students and adults who watched a school sports event become a crime scene.

For Austin Metcalf’s family, the defense argument is painful.

They hear “fear.”

But they lost a son.

They hear “self-defense.”

But Austin never came home.

For Karmelo Anthony, the defense case may be his last chance to convince jurors that the fatal seconds under that tent were not murder, but panic.

The final conclusion of today’s trial is not a verdict.

It is a turning point.

The prosecution has laid out its case.

Now the defense must persuade twelve jurors that fear, not intent, explains the wound that killed Austin Metcalf.

If they fail, Anthony could face decades behind bars — possibly life.