Austin Metcalf’s Final Words Revealed as Karmelo Anthony Faces Trial

A Texas courtroom became the setting for one of the most closely watched murder trials of the year as proceedings got underway against Karmelo Anthony, the teenager accused of fatally stabbing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf during a high school track meet in 2025.

Lead prosecutor Bill Wirskye wasted no time painting a grim picture for jurors, walking them through the final moments of Metcalf’s life with details that silenced the room.

According to Wirskye, Metcalf lifted his shirt, looked down at his wound, and said “I’ve been stabbed” before his body gave out and he tumbled down the bleacher steps, the Daily Mail reported.

His twin brother Hunter was waiting at the bottom, and rushed to his side the moment he fell.

Wirskye told the jury that Anthony made a deliberate choice the morning of the track meet. 

“This young man, Karmelo Anthony… decided to take a knife to a high school track meet and provoke and go after another young man he didn’t know, and plunged it into his chest, into his heart, causing his death,” the prosecutor said.

He called it “unjustified, unprovoked murder” — a framing the defense is expected to contest as the trial continues.

The confrontation reportedly began over a tent. 

Athletes from the Memorial High School team had set up their space at the meet, and Metcalf was told he could not be inside it. 

Wirskye explained to jurors that team tents operate much like locker rooms — private areas meant to give athletes a secure space and protect their belongings, NBC5 reported.

Metcalf had received specific instructions from his coach that day: step up and be a leader. He followed through, approaching Anthony and telling him to leave.

Anthony’s response was a warning: “Touch me and see what happens.”

Despite initially wanting no part of a physical confrontation, Metcalf eventually engaged. Wirskye noted that in the chaos that followed, Metcalf did not even realize he had been stabbed until it was too late.

Anthony bolted from the scene immediately after but was stopped by coaches who had witnessed the altercation. He told them Metcalf had been the one to make physical contact first.

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Wirskye dismissed that explanation before the jury. “As if that justifies his act, as if it justifies the murder he just committed,” the prosecutor said.

The drama did not stay confined to the courtroom. 

Outside the building, a confrontation erupted when two men who had come to support the Metcalf family were approached by a group of Anthony backers.

One individual in the crowd directed a threat at the pair, saying “Imma push you if I get close enough, push you right into that grave,” before adding a racial slur.

Another Anthony supporter insisted the defendant bore no responsibility for escalating the situation, claiming he was “minding his d*mn business when them boys came up to him.”

The trial’s opening day was already shadowed by controversy that had begun a day earlier, when jury selection wrapped up without a single Black juror seated on the panel.

Anthony family spokesperson Dominique Alexander responded to the outcome publicly, stating that the jury’s composition means Anthony is “not receiving a fair trial.” 

The declaration drew immediate attention and fueled an already charged atmosphere surrounding the high-profile case.

By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

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