KARMELO ANTHONY APPEALS HIS MURDER CONVICTION — THEN AUSTIN METCALF’S TWIN BROTHER DELIVERS THE WORDS THAT SHAKE THE CASE ALL OVER AGAIN
The legal turning point that many expected has finally arrived.
Karmelo Anthony, the Texas teenager convicted of murdering 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track meet in Frisco, has filed a notice of appeal after receiving a 35-year prison sentence.
For Anthony’s supporters, the appeal is the next fight — a chance to challenge a verdict they believe was shaped by controversy, public pressure, and questions surrounding the trial process.
For Austin Metcalf’s family, it is something very different.
It is another chapter in a nightmare they say should have ended when the jury spoke.
Anthony, now 19, was convicted after jurors rejected his self-defense claim in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf. The confrontation began under a team tent during rainy weather at a track meet, when Austin reportedly told Anthony to move from the Memorial High School team area. Moments later, Austin was stabbed once in the chest.
The jury sentenced Anthony to 35 years in prison.
But the case did not end there.
According to reports, Anthony has now filed an appeal and claims he is unable to afford an appellate attorney, despite a legal defense fundraiser that once raised more than $600,000 before being taken down. The appeal could open the door for arguments over trial fairness, jury selection, and whether the self-defense claim was properly weighed.
Yet while lawyers prepare the next legal battle, the emotional center of the case remains with Austin’s family — especially his twin brother, Hunter Metcalf.
Hunter addressed Anthony in court after the conviction, telling him he had taken away his best friend and future uncle to his children. He also said Anthony had let “the devil take over,” a statement that cut through the courtroom with a kind of grief no legal motion could soften.
That moment is now being viewed differently in the wake of the appeal.
Because Anthony’s legal team is asking the court system to reopen the fight over the conviction, while Austin’s family is being forced to relive the day that shattered theirs.
The appeal does not mean Anthony’s conviction has been overturned. It does not mean a new trial has been granted. It simply means his side is formally challenging the outcome.
But emotionally, the appeal has reopened everything.
The testimony.
The knife.
The final seconds under the tent.
The question of self-defense.
The sentence Austin’s family believes still cannot equal the life that was taken.
Judge John Roach Jr., who presided over the trial, has publicly defended the verdict, the 35-year sentence, and his decision to keep cameras out of the courtroom, saying he believes the case was handled properly.
Still, the appeal ensures that the national debate around the case will not disappear.
Some see Anthony as a teenager punished too harshly after a chaotic confrontation. Others see Austin as an unarmed 17-year-old whose future was ended by a knife that should never have been pulled.
Between those two views stands one grieving family — and one twin brother whose words may outlast every legal filing.
Because long after the appeal is argued, the courtroom will remember what Hunter Metcalf said:
Anthony did not just take Austin from the world.
He took him from the person who had known him since before either of them could speak.
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