Karmelo
Anthony.
Stand Up.
A 17-year-old (now 19) honor student, team captain, and two-job worker who defended himself in the rain at a Texas track meet. Convicted of murder on June 9, 2026. The appeal is underway — and we do not stop until he is free.
Your message is on the wall. We have you.
Karmelo will know you stood with him. The appeal is underway — thank you for standing where it counts.
Post Him a Public Word
Every message left above appears here, so Karmelo and the whole world can see he is not alone. Add your message ↑
Share his story. Keep his name loud.
A guide for supporters. Ready-to-post graphics in every format — square, wide, story, portrait. Support him, don't expose him. Download one or grab the full kit. Please don't post his mugshot or any mailing address.
What happened that night, on the record, without varnish.
On the evening of April 2, 2025, Karmelo Anthony — 17 years old at the time of the incident (now 19) — an honor student, captain of both his football and track teams at Centennial High School, carrying a 3.7 GPA, working two jobs — was sitting under a tent at a UIL track meet in Frisco, Texas. It was raining so heavily that officers could not take witness statements outside. Police pulled witnesses into a locker room because the rain came down too hard to write.
Karmelo was seeking shelter. He was not the aggressor. Austin Metcalf and his twin brother Hunter approached and confronted him. Karmelo's own father stated publicly: "He was not the aggressor. He was not the one who started it." Multiple witnesses corroborate this account.
"I was protecting myself. He put his hands on me." — Karmelo Anthony, first words to responding officers, April 2, 2025
When Austin Metcalf physically grabbed and pushed Karmelo to remove him from the tent, Karmelo defended himself. He then walked directly to officers, hands open. He identified himself. He asked, more than once, whether Austin was going to be okay. He did not run. He did not resist. He cooperated fully.
He was arrested on the spot. He was held on a $1,000,000 bond — later reduced to $250,000 after Judge Angela Tucker determined the original amount was facially excessive for a teenager with zero criminal history. He has been under house arrest with an ankle monitor since April 14, 2025. He has checked in with the court every single Friday without fail for over thirteen months.
On June 24, 2025, a grand jury indicted him on first-degree murder. He pleaded not guilty and argued self-defense. On June 9, 2026, a Collin County jury convicted him of murder and he was sentenced to 35 years. His legal team has filed an appeal.