THE 9:54 AM LEAK & THE UNSEEN CCTV: The 10 Seconds That Just Destroyed The Frisco Official Narrative 🚨
The Collin County courtroom was supposed to witness an open-and-shut case. The prosecution confidently promised the jury 35 witnesses to prove that 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony was a calculated aggressor who initiated the tragedy at the Frisco track meet. But on Day 3, they abruptly rested their case after calling only 21 people to the stand.
Why the sudden halt? Because their “perfect” narrative is rapidly unraveling.
Behind the graphic autopsy photos that forced a grieving mother to flee the courtroom, the defense’s brutal cross-examinations have ripped massive, undeniable holes in the timeline of the 9:55 AM nightmare. The tragedy under the Memorial High School tent is no longer a simple story of cold-blooded intent—it is a terrifying collision of betrayal, paralyzing fear, and a catastrophic physical mismatch.

“You Don’t Have Anything In There”: The 6 Words That Changed Everything
For days, the public was told that Karmelo launched an unprovoked attack after refusing to leave the team tent. But a stunning admission from a 17-year-old teammate just revealed the chilling final exchange.
As the tension skyrocketed, Karmelo repeatedly warned the crowd he had “something” in his bag, a desperate attempt to establish a physical boundary. Instead of calling security or backing off, 17-year-old Austin Metcalf called his bluff. According to the new testimony, Austin looked at Karmelo and stated:
“You don’t have anything in there.”
Right after uttering those words, Austin delivered a two-handed shove. Did a towering athlete fatally miscalculate a terrified student’s frantic warning? In the eyes of the law, ignoring a verbal boundary to initiate physical contact changes the entire landscape of self-defense.
The Silent Betrayal Under the Tent
The prosecution painted Karmelo as a trespassing stranger hunting for a fight on rival turf. Yet, the defense pulled out a gut-wrenching twist: Karmelo actually knew people in that tent.
During a grueling cross-examination, it was revealed that Karmelo had previously hung out with 18-year-old Eddie Parra. When Karmelo walked into the tent, he even greeted Eddie. But as the hostile crowd of athletes began to corner the 130lbs honors student, Eddie stood by and watched in absolute silence.
Karmelo wasn’t a predator on foreign ground; he was a tn who found himself utterly abandoned by the only familiar face in an aggressively escalating mob.
The 130lbs Scholar vs. The 200lbs Athlete
The prosecution continues to downplay the initial physical contact as a “minor shove.” But the defense masterfully forced a witness to admit a critical truth under oath: Austin Metcalf’s massive size was deeply “intimidating.”
When a 200lbs athlete aggressively shoves a 130lbs student who is already trapped, outnumbered, and hyperventilating, the brain’s primitive survival instinct takes over. The law recognizes the sheer, blinding panic of a “fight or flight” response. Was the devastating 2-inch fatal str!ke an act of calculated malice, or the tragic, adrenaline-fueled misfire of a cornered tn fighting for his life?
The Digital Trail and the Heart-Wrenching Bodycam
While the courtroom reels from the grueling medical examiner’s report, investigative whispers point to a dark, unseen digital footprint. Were there secret 3:00 AM group chats and deleted Snapchats that forced a 3.7 GPA student to pack a bl*de in the first place? Was there a silent campaign of cyber-harassment leading up to that fateful morning?
Combine these rumors with the raw 10:02 AM bodycam footage—where Karmelo weeps in the back of the police cruiser, frantically begging, “Did he make it? Is he going to be okay?”—and the image of a cold-blooded k!ller completely shatters.
The prosecution has laid its heaviest, most emotional cards on the table. Now, the defense is preparing to drop the ultimate legal bomb. Will Karmelo Anthony take the stand to look the jury in the eye and describe the 9:55 AM nightmare himself? The terrifying truth of what actually happened in the shadows of that tent is about to divide the nation forever.
Day 3 of the Karmelo Anthony trial brings emotional testimony and graphic autopsy details
The Karmelo Anthony trial continued Saturday for almost nine hours with about a dozen witnesses at the Collin County Courthouse. Many of them broke down in tears while testifying. Anthony is charged with the stabbing death of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf at a Frisco track meet in April 2025.
The prosecution rested after calling 21 witnesses. The defense then began presenting its case.
Some of the most gripping testimony came from the medical examiner. The judge warned the courtroom that the information would be graphic, prompting Metcalf’s family to leave the room.
Graphic autopsy details described
Collin County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Elizabeth Ventura testified that Metcalf was stabbed through the heart. She described the wound as gaping, two-and-a-half inches in length, and not survivable.
Prosecutor Bill Wirskye showed four autopsy photos to the jury. Several jurors appeared emotional, covering their mouths.
Witnesses recount stabbing scene
Eighteen-year-old Eddie Parra, a teammate of Metcalf at Memorial High School, also took the stand. Prosecutors asked Parra who he noticed in the tent.
“Karmelo was there. I dabbed him up,” Parra said.
Wirskye asked if Parra thought it was weird that Anthony was in the tent.
“Yes, because teams are supposed to be at their own tent,” Parra said.
Parra broke down on the stand when describing the stabbing, saying he noticed blood and a hole in Metcalf’s chest, and that Metcalf started screaming for help.
The prosecutor asked Parra if the case was about race or self-defense, and Parra said no. Wirskye then asked who was wrong that day. Parra replied, “Karmelo.”

Teen witness disputes self-defense claim
Another witness, who CBS News Texas is not identifying because he is underage, said he did not believe the stabbing was in self-defense.
“That’s lethal force against non-lethal force,” the witness said.
Defense begins presenting its case
The defense called Centennial High School track coach Adam Linwood to the stand. He said Anthony’s teammates nominated him for a captaincy, and that athletes often go into other teams’ tents to mingle. The prosecutor asked, “Is there any reason an athlete should have a knife at a track meet?” Linwood replied, “No.”
Anthony’s defense team argued he acted in self-defense and said that at the time of the stabbing, Frisco ISD had no policy barring athletes from going into other teams’ tents. The defense referred to Anthony as “Melo” during its witness interviews.
Trial resumes Monday morning
The trial resumes at 9 a.m. Monday with more defense witnesses. Anthony faces five to 99 years or a life sentence if convicted.
Prosecutors rest in Karmelo Anthony murder trial after testimony on track meet stabbing
Student witness testifies Anthony said “I’m not leaving, fuck you all” before grabbing knife in his backpack and killing Austin Metcalf.
The Collin County Courthouse in McKinney, Texas (David Lee/Courthouse News)
MCKINNEY, Texas (CN) – Texas prosecutors rested their case Saturday in the murder trial of Karmelo Anthony after witnesses testified the Black teenager cursed, provoked and insulted students at a suburban track meet before stabbing an unarmed white teenager who shoved him.
Four teenage witnesses testified for the prosecution on the sixth day of trial. Anthony, 19, of Frisco, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the April 2, 2025, killing of Austin Metcalf, 17, also of Frisco.
Collin County District Judge John Roach asked the media not to identify the young witnesses. One 16-year-old Memorial High School student testified that he heard Anthony say, “I’m not leaving, fuck you all,” after being asked to leave the school’s tent during a rain delay. Anthony, a member of the Centennial High School team, did not have a school tent at the track meet and was repeatedly told to leave.
The witness said Anthony called the students “a bunch of pussies” who were “not going to do nothing about it” when he refused to leave. Defense attorneys maintain Anthony was speaking to a friend in the tent and acted in self-defense when confronted by Metcalf and his twin brother, Hunter.
Collin County First Assistant District Attorney Bill Wirskye asked if Metcalf took the lead in the altercation.
“Yes, Karmelo put his hand in the bag and said five times, ’touch me and see what happens,” the witness testified. “Austin said he was not going to touch the guy; he was calm.”
The witness said Metcalf “did not deserve” to be killed and that Anthony committed murder.
On cross-examination, defense attorney Toby Shook noted that the witness did not mention Anthony’s cursing in the written statement he gave police after the killing. The witness acknowledged he did not know whether other nearby students heard the remarks.
A 17-year-old male Memorial student testified no one in the tent knew who Anthony was.
“If you are a guest, you are supposed to be on the other side of the stadium,” the witness said.
Wirskye asked the witness if it was his “impression Karmelo Anthony was trying to provoke Austin Metcalf” and if Metcalf responded to the provocation.
“Yes,” the witness testified. “He put his hand on his shoulder … you do not expect to see someone get stabbed at a track meet.”
“Was there any reason you saw for Karmelo Anthony to stab Austin Metcalf?” Wirskye asked. “Was Karmelo Anthony acting in self-defense?”
“No,” the witness said. “That’s lethal force against non-lethal force.”
On cross-examination, Shook reminded the witness of his written statement to police that Austin put his hand on Anthony’s shoulder to intimidate him.
“More of a warning,” the witness said. “Actions speak louder than words.”
Prosecutors rested after calling their final witness, Collin County medical examiner Dr. Elizabeth Ventura. She testified that the two-inch-deep stab wound pierced Metcalf’s sternum and the right ventricle of his heart. Several people, including Metcalf’s parents, left the courtroom during her testimony.
Defense attorneys immediately moved for a directed verdict, arguing the state failed to prove the elements of first-degree murder. Judge John Roach denied the motion.
The defense then called Centennial coach Adam Linwood, who testified that students from different schools regularly mingle during track meets because of the “hours of downtime” between events. He said Centennial requires a coach to be present in each tent and that students sometimes enter tents belonging to other schools.
On cross-examination, prosecutor Bill Wirskye showed Linwood a replica of the weapon and asked, “This is not a cleat sharpener, correct?” Linwood agreed. Wirskye also asked why Centennial did not have a tent at the meet, and Linwood explained it was being transported on a later bus rather than the morning bus Anthony took to his earlier events.
The courtroom was filled to capacity with media, supporters of both families and members of the public. Neither side has commented publicly because of a gag order.
The trial is expected to last two weeks. Anthony faces a sentence of five to 99 years or life in prison if convicted.
Anthony’s attorneys have criticized the “noise” and “completely false information” surrounding the trial, which has drawn national attention and online misinformation involving a white victim and Black defendant.
There are no Black jurors on the 12-person jury, selected from a pool of over 500 people. During the three days of jury selection, Judge Roach allowed prosecutors to strike the remaining three Black potential jurors. Despite a Batsonchallenge from Anthony’s attorneys, prosecutors successfully argued the three were struck for the race-neutral reason of being educators of school-aged children.
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