“OUR SON DIDN’T GET A FAIR TRIAL.”
The verdict has been delivered, but the Karmelo Anthony case is suddenly back at the center of national debate.
Just hours after the murder conviction, Anthony’s parents publicly challenged the outcome, insisting the jury got it wrong and that their son was not given a fair trial.
Now one statement from the family is spreading rapidly online, reigniting fierce arguments between supporters and critics who thought the case was already settled.
The verdict may be over.
But the controversy is only getting louder.
👇 The comment that has social media exploding tonight
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The legal battle surrounding the high-profile murder trial of 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony has entered a contentious new phase following his conviction in Collin County, Texas. Anthony was sentenced to 35 years in prison for the April 2, 2025, fatal stabbing of fellow student-athlete Austin Metcalf, 17, under a team tent during a high school track meet in Frisco. While the jury required less than three hours of deliberation to reject self-defense arguments and reach a guilty verdict, the emotional aftermath has laid bare a deeply fractured public response and an aggressive defense strategy that will now move to the appellate courts.
In an emotional televised interview, Anthony’s parents, Kala Hayes and Andrew Anthony, fiercely contested the integrity of the judicial process. Hayes stated unequivocally that she does not believe her son received a fair trial, describing the proceedings as a setup and declaring that the family will not stop fighting for justice. The core of their grievance, echoed by defense advocates and political figures like Texas U.S. Representative Jasmine Crockett, centers heavily on the racial composition of the jury panel. Despite the case involving a Black defendant and a White victim, the finalized 12-member jury contained zero Black individuals. The prosecution used its peremptory strikes to dismiss two Black prospective jurors, a move the defense formally objected to at trial but was ultimately overruled by the presiding judge, who accepted the state’s assertion that the case was entirely race-neutral.
The defense at trial had leaned heavily on a “sudden passion” mitigating claim under Texas law, arguing that Anthony had reacted in sudden terror after being shoved and taunted by Metcalf and his teammates when he sought shelter from the rain under their school’s tent. Had the jury accepted that his capacity for cool reflection was entirely compromised by fear, the charge would have been downgraded to a second-degree felony, capping his maximum sentence at 20 years. Instead, the jury rejected both the sudden passion mitigation and the absolute self-defense claim, aligning with prosecutors who presented eyewitness testimony that Anthony was asked to leave the tent up to 15 times and explicitly warned bystanders by stating, “Touch me and see what happens,” before deploying a pocket knife that pierced Metcalf’s right ventricle.

The verdict has triggered intense national debates, drawing public commentary from cultural figures like Cardi B, who suggested the justice system sought to make an example of the teenager, while right-wing provocateurs used the case to inflame racial tensions online. Outside the courthouse, ideological confrontations escalated to physical altercations, resulting in multiple arrests by local law enforcement. For the victim’s family, the 35-year sentence provided a bittersweet resolution to what they termed a senseless act of violence. Metcalf’s mother, Megan Metcalf, delivered a heartbreaking victim impact statement directly to Anthony, noting that while he was sentenced to 35 years, her family had been handed a lifetime sentence without their son.
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The focus of the case now shifts entirely to the appellate process. A formal notice of appeal was officially filed in Collin County court, with Anthony requesting a court-appointed appellate attorney due to a lack of financial resources. Legal experts indicate that the appellate strategy will center almost exclusively on the constitutional validity of the jury selection process, specifically investigating whether the state systematically and improperly excluded Black jurors. As Anthony begins his 35-year term at the Wallace Pack Unit outside of Houston, his family’s public campaign serves as a clear indication that while the trial phase has concluded, the broader fight over systemic fairness and justice in the case is far from over.
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