THE MASK SLIPS: A 5-Inch Bl*de, A Cruel Slur, and the Defense Disaster That Just Fractured Frisco

The narrative of the terrified, bullied honors student is officially over. Day three of the Karmelo Anthony trial in Collin County delivered a series of devastating blows—not from the prosecution, but from the suspect’s very own defense team. What was initially painted as a desperate act of self-defense has rapidly unraveled into a chilling portrait of calculated provocation and lethal arrogance under the Memorial High School track tent.

As the courtroom reels from the latest testimonies, the Frisco community is waking up to a horrific reality: the tragedy at 9:55 AM wasn’t a panic attack. It was a trap.

“You’re Not Going to Move Me”: The 15 Warnings

For months, the public was led to believe that a 130lbs student with a 3.7 GPA was unfairly cornered and ambushed by hostile athletes on rival turf. However, explosive testimonies from eyewitnesses have completely shattered this illusion.

The courtroom sat in stunned silence as teenagers testified that Anthony was asked to leave the rival team’s “home base” tent an astonishing 15 separate times. If a student is genuinely terrified for their life, they walk away. Instead of retreating to safety, the 17-year-old planted his feet.

When 17-year-old Austin Metcalf finally approached, Anthony didn’t cower. According to an 18-year-old witness—who had actually greeted and “dapped” Anthony just moments prior—the accused looked directly at Metcalf and delivered a vicious, expletive-filled taunt:

“You’re not going to move me. You’re a b*tch… Touch me and find out.”

This was not the desperate plea of a cornered victim; it was the calculated arrogance of a teenager craving a confrontation.

A “Soft Shove” vs. A 5-Inch Tactical W*apon

The internet was previously convinced that a towering 200lbs athlete violently attacked a smaller scholar, triggering a frantic “fight or flight” response. The sworn reality presented under oath was far more disturbing.

Witnesses explicitly described Metcalf giving Anthony a mere “soft shove” in response to the aggressive, face-to-face cursing. Anthony’s reaction to this minor physical contact wasn’t a blind panic—it was the rapid deployment of a deadly w*apon.

Shockingly, new testimony revealed the item Anthony pulled from his backpack wasn’t just a standard 3.5-inch pocket tool, as initially reported. It was a massive 5-inch folding kn!fe. The sheer size of the blde introduces a terrifying level of premeditation. As multiple grieving students testified, no one expects extreme v!olence at a sunny high school track meet. You do not bring a 5-inch tactical wapon to a sporting event unless you actively anticipate using it.

The $400k Defense Disaster: An Ultimate Betrayal

The most humiliating courtroom twist of the decade occurred during the grueling cross-examinations. Armed with a massive $400,000 defense fund, Anthony’s high-powered legal team attempted to call witnesses to justify the fatal str!ke. It backfired catastrophically.

In a massive legal blunder, a 17-year-old witness brought in by the defense was asked point-blank by prosecutors who was actually at fault for the tragedy. His answer sent absolute shockwaves through the jury box:

  • “I think Karmelo was in the wrong.”

The defense’s own star witness crumbled under pressure, testifying under oath that he believed Anthony intentionally provoked the fatal confrontation. You simply cannot claim self-defense when your own side admits you started the fight.

The heartbreaking reality of the 9:55 AM clash is finally out in the open. The tragedy wasn’t a desperate bid for survival; it was the devastating climax of a bruised ego, a cruel slur, and a lethal bluff. As the Collin County jury processes the fact that an innocent teenager lost his life over a bleacher seat, the community’s illusion of safety remains shattered forever.

👇 Click the link in the comments below to read the leaked, uncensored courtroom transcripts and see the shocking video evidence they tried to hide!

No Black jurors selected for murder trial over killing at 2025 Texas high school

No Black jurors selected for murder trial over killing at 2025 Texas high school

Karmelo Anthony, who is Black, is accused of stabbing Austin Metcalf, who was white, at track meet in an affluent Dallas suburb

After a 2025 high school track meet in Frisco, Texas, ended with one student dead and another accused of murder, Karmelo Anthony, then 17, was indicted on first-degree murder in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf, 17. Social media posts about the death divided the case into racial lines, sparking national outrage. Anthony, who is being tried as an adult, is Black; Metcalf was white.

This week marked the beginning of Anthony’s murder trial.

After three days of juror selection, attorneys selected 12 jurors and six alternates for the trial, narrowed down from 600 initial summonses. None of the jurors are Black.

Defense lawyers accused prosecutors of improperly striking the only three remaining Black prospective jurors, according to a local NBC affiliate. The district judge John Roach, however, accepted the state’s explanation that they were removed because they are educators.

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“The prosecution used its final strikes to remove the remaining qualified Black jurors from the jury pool, raising serious concerns about fairness and equal justice,” the Next Generation Action Network civil rights organization, based in Dallas, wrote in a post on X on Wednesday.

“We respect the court, but we will not remain silent … Every person deserves a fair trial and confidence that justice is being administered without bias. We are calling on the court to ensure Mr Anthony’s constitutional rights are fully protected.”

The teens went to different high schools in the same affluent Dallas suburb. They were both at the 11-5A championship district track meet during a rainstorm that turned into a downpour. Witnesses said that the incident began when Anthony sat under a tent belonging to Metcalf’s team.

According to the arrest report, witnesses said that Anthony allegedly reached inside his bag and said, “Touch me and see what happens.” Metcalf grabbed Anthony and, according to a witness, Anthony allegedly pulled a knife from his bag, stabbed Metcalf and ran away.

In a packed courtroom on Thursday, jurors were shown grainy surveillance footage of the attack, taken from across the field.

The video shows a person, whom the state identified as Anthony, entering the tent . There are quick movements – prosecutors told jurors that that was Metcalf, trying to push Anthony out of the tent. Later, Anthony exits the tent, after appearing to stab Metcalf, and runs away.

The defense on Thursday said that there were differing accounts as to what was said in the moments leading to the stabbing. Anthony’s attorney, Mike Howard, said Anthony went to the tent to get away from the rain after seeing someone he recognized. Everyone else at the tent attended the same high school as Metcalf. There, the defense said, Metcalf and his twin brother, who are about 6ft 1in and 213lb, confronted Anthony, who is 5ft 8in and about 130lb.

Metcalf made first contact and “grabs, shoves, pushes” Anthony, according to the defense. Then Anthony put his hand in his bag and made a split-second decision to act. Howard claimed that the teen acted in self-defense, reacting to “fear and chaos”, while a prosecutor said that Metcalf was stabbed in a “sneak, surprise attack”.

Jurors heard from eyewitnesses, including coaches and an athletic trainer.

“You want your kids in your camp,” said Vincent Hooper, the track and football coach at the Heritage high school and a witness for the state, of track tents.

The defense noted that Centennial, Anthony’s high school, did not have a tent at the meet. Tiffany Whiteaker, Memorial high school’s athletic trainer and a witness for the prosecution, said that there was a lot of confusion on the day of the attack because of the rain. Some students were on the field, while others were on the bus and others, still, under the tent.

Hooper held Anthony after the stabbing. He testified that he told Anthony that his entire life would change if Metcalf died.

“He’s not going to die,” Anthony said, according to Hooper.

Before the second day of testimony began on Friday morning, three people were removed from the Collin county courthouse.

On Friday, a Frisco school resource officer, Eduardo Cortez, testified that Anthony was cooperative after the incident. He said that he handcuffed Anthony and radioed, “I have the alleged suspect detained.” Cortez said that Anthony then said: “I am not alleged. I did it.”

Cortez recalled that without being prompted Anthony said: “He put his hands on me. I told him not to. He put his hands on me.” While being placed in the police car, Anthony asked if Metcalf was OK.

Jurors watched body-cam footage of the events that Cortez detailed. As Anthony is walking towards the car, the video depicts him sobbing and saying: “He put his hands on me.” Moments later, while answering questions, Anthony is no longer crying.

Cortez also testified that weapons were strictly prohibited on Frisco school grounds.

Judge Roach has imposed a gag order in the case and barred any electronics, including cellphones, from the courtroom during the trial. The trial is expected to last about two weeks. Anthony, if convicted, faces five years to life in prison.

 The headline of this article was amended on 6 June 2026 to reflect that no Black people were selected for the jury, instead of the jury being all white as it originally stated.

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.

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.