The courtroom was already heavy before the sentence was read.

After months of public debate, online arguments, and painful testimony, Karmelo Anthony, 19, was convicted of murder and sentenced to 35 years in prison for the fatal stabbing of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track meet in Frisco, Texas.

But the moment that left the courtroom silent did not come from a lawyer.

It came from Austin’s family.

Throughout the trial, Anthony’s defense had argued that the fatal stabbing happened in a moment of fear and self-defense. Prosecutors painted a very different picture — one of a confrontation that escalated into a deadly act when Anthony pulled a knife from his bag and stabbed Austin once in the chest.

The jury rejected the self-defense claim.

Then came the victim impact statements.

Austin’s twin brother, Hunter Metcalf, stood before the court with grief that no verdict could erase. His words were not loud. They did not need to be. They cut through the room because they came from the one person who had shared Austin’s life from the very beginning.

Reports said Hunter delivered a devastating six-word rebuke to Anthony:

“Eventually your name will be forgotten.”

For the Metcalf family, the trial was not just about punishment. It was about making sure Austin was remembered as more than a name in a case file — more than a headline, more than a viral argument, more than the center of a courtroom battle over self-defense.

Austin’s father also addressed Anthony, condemning the loss of a young life and the pain left behind for a family that will now measure time by every birthday, holiday, and milestone Austin never gets to reach.

Anthony, who did not testify during the trial, reportedly became emotional during sentencing and kept his head down as the family spoke.

Outside the courtroom, the case remains one of the most debated school violence trials in Texas. Supporters of Anthony had argued that he was afraid. Supporters of Austin’s family said the evidence showed something far more final: an unarmed teenager died after a confrontation that should never have ended with a knife.

The 35-year sentence closed the trial.

But it did not close the wound.

For Austin’s family, the final message was clear: a verdict may decide punishment, but it cannot restore the life that was taken.

And in that courtroom, after all the legal arguments ended, the most powerful evidence was not a video, a witness, or a timeline.

It was a grieving family refusing to let Austin be forgotten.