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Gabija Saveiskyte

The Grotesque Knife Detail And Harrowing Witness Moments That Secured Karmelo Anthony’s Decades-Long Sentence

A teenage boy’s split-second decision to pull a knife from his backpack has landed him a decades-long prison sentence.

In a trial that captured national attention, Karmelo Anthony was sentenced to 35 years behind bars for violently ending the life of Austin Metcalf at a track meet in Texas.

“For journalists, activists, this is a story. For our family, this is our reality,” the victim’s mother, Meghan Metcalf, said in court.

Karmelo Anthony’s split-second decision to pull a knife from his backpack has landed him a decades-long prison sentence

Image credits: KPRC2Click2Houston

Trigger warning: This article contains graphic details that may be distressing to some.

Karmelo Anthony and Austin Metcalf were two boys from two different schools. Both had dreams for their future, and both had families expecting them to safely return home on the ill-fated day of April 2, 2025, when they met for the first and tragically the last time.

One of them lost their life, while the other lost their youth.

Image credits: Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice
Image credits: Imperium953

A Collin County jury sentenced Karmelo to 35 years in prison for stabbing the athlete from a rival team.

He was indicted for first-degree m*rder for the harrowing incident.

Claims about Karmelo acting in self-defense were rejected by the jury, who also had the option of considering the lesser charge of manslaughter, which carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

The two 17-year-olds were from two different high schools and met for the first time at the track meet

Image credits: Meghan Prall Metcalf

The two 17-year-olds crossed paths for the first time during a high school track meet at Kuykendall Stadium in Frisco, Texas.

On the rainy day, Austin from Frisco Memorial High School found Karmelo, a student from Frisco Centennial High School, sitting in his team’s tent.

He asked Karmelo to leave the tent, saying members of other teams weren’t allowed to be there.

Image credits: KPRC2Click2Houston
Image credits: AbkTrauma

While testifying in court, about a dozen students from different high schools also said athletes from other schools were not allowed under their team’s tent.

They said Karmelo was asked to leave about 10 times.

“It wasn’t just Austin,” one teenager said. “People, including myself, were saying for him to leave.”

But Austin led the confrontation because his coach reportedly encouraged him to take charge that day.

“Touch me and see what happens,” Karmelo said before brandishing the pocket knife

Image credits: KPRC2Click2Houston

Witnesses said Austin was unarmed and didn’t suspect that Karmelo had a weapon on him.

“Touch me and see what happens,” Karmelo said at some point, according to a police report.

Austin replied with a statement along the lines of, “We’re in Frisco. You don’t have anything.”

Image credits: Meghan Prall Metcalf
Image credits: algovine

During the verbal scuffle, Austin pushed the fellow athlete, who then reached into his backpack at some point and pulled out a folding knife.

He struck the victim in the heart, causing a wave of horror to ripple through the stadium as students and coaches scrambled to help.

One coach was seen holding back Austin’s twin brother, Hunter, who was hysterical at the scene, screaming, “Oh my God. He’s my best friend. He’s my brother.”

Karmelo jogged away from the tent and eventually told a coach, “He put his hands on me. I stabbed him,” according to testimonies.

“He put his hands on me. I stabbed him,” Karmelo reportedly told a coach while Austin was wounded in the tent

Image credits: Jeff Metcalf

Coaches tried to save the wounded 6-foot-1, 213-pound student.

One football coach testified that they put pressure on the stab wound.

Another athletic trainer said she did CPR until paramedics arrived and took over.

“Everybody was praying,” Memorial High School head track coach Robert Starr said during his testimony. “I just knew Austin was gone.”

Image credits: Jeff Metcalf

Austin was rushed to the hospital, where he was eventually pronounced deceased.

Meanwhile, Karmelo was detained at the stadium.

His weapon, sold in Walmart for $13, was recovered with “bone and blood” still on the blade.

Austin’s parents took the stand during the trial, along with several students from the track meet

Image credits: FOX7Austin
Image credits: B1TuckerCarlson

“I got the alleged suspect in handcuffs detained,” one officer was heard saying.

Karmelo then allegedly interjected, saying, “I’m not alleged, I did it.”

“He put his hands on me,” the sobbing teenager added. “I told him not to.”

Image credits: CBSTexas

The trial also saw Austin’s parents take the stand, with his mother saying, “We will never know what our future could have been. For journalists, activists, this is a story. For our family, this is our reality.”

His father, Jeff Metcalf, said he is no longer the person he used to be since his son’s tragic passing.

“People think grief is sadness, it is not. It is rage. Pure unfiltered rage,” the bereaved father said, slamming his fist down on a table.

After Karmelo was handed his sentence this week, Collin County District Attorney Greg Willis thanked the “brave kids” who testified in court.

“A year ago, when this senseless murder unfolded, I said that it had struck a deep nerve in Collin County and far beyond,” he said.

“I asked our community to ignore all the noise and instead be level-headed and patient as the process worked, and today the process delivered accountability.”

Netizens commented on the incident that ensured the two families would never be the same again

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