Karmelo Anthony was serving an active suspension from his school

volsrocks

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Karmelo Anthony was serving an active suspension from his school at the time of the stabbing incident on April 2, 2025. Because of this suspension, he was not permitted to be on school campuses or attend school athletic events, and he was specifically supposed to be absent from the district track meet where the confrontation occurred

WHOOPS
 
Karmelo Anthony was serving an active suspension from his school at the time of the stabbing incident on April 2, 2025. Because of this suspension, he was not permitted to be on school campuses or attend school athletic events, and he was specifically supposed to be absent from the district track meet where the confrontation occurred

WHOOPS
Is Karmelo Anthony different than Carmelo Anthony?
 
Karmelo Anthony was serving an active suspension from his school at the time of the stabbing incident on April 2, 2025. Because of this suspension, he was not permitted to be on school campuses or attend school athletic events, and he was specifically supposed to be absent from the district track meet where the confrontation occurred

WHOOPS


Who told you that?
 
Is Karmelo Anthony different than Carmelo Anthony?


Yes. Carmelo Kyam Anthony is an American former professional basketball player. Nicknamed "Melo", Anthony played 19 seasons in the National Basketball Association and is a ten-time NBA All-Star and six-time All-NBA Team member.
 
Yes. Carmelo Kyam Anthony is an American former professional basketball player. Nicknamed "Melo", Anthony played 19 seasons in the National Basketball Association and is a ten-time NBA All-Star and six-time All-NBA Team member.
Hes in school?
 
Hes in school?

No. Karmelo was, until recently.

Karmelo Anthony was a high school student in Frisco, Texas, but has since graduated and is the defendant in a high-profile murder trial. In April 2025, when he was 17, he fatally stabbed a fellow student, Austin Metcalf, during a dispute at a high school track meet. Anthony, who was on the Centennial High School track and football teams, completed his high school graduation requirements while under house arrest before his trial began.
 
He’s going to get a trial

You of course only want one outcome

BTY there will not be one black person on his jury for some reason
 
The decedent physically attached the man

They were both 17 at the time and at a track meet
 
The decedent physically attached the man

They were both 17 at the time and at a track meet

Black witnesses say otherwise

Karmelo Anthony Trial: State rests after jurors hear testimony on a Saturday

Parra agreed with all the other student athletes who have said this case is not about race. He also said Anthony had no reason to stab Metcalf and no cause for self-defense.


He said another teammate noticed Anthony and asked him, "Who's this guy?" The teen said Anthony replied, "I'm a nobody." The teammate replied, "If you're a nobody, then get out of our tent." The teen testified that Anthony responded saying, "F--- y'all."
The teen testified that Anthony repeated "F--- y'all. I'm not going ot leave. Y'all are a bunch of pu--ies. Y'all not going to do anything." He said Anthony also threatened, "Touch me and see what happens." Metcalf told him, "I'm not going to fight you."
This teen, who said it was his first track meet, testified that Metcalf didn't do anything to get stabbed in the chest.

The next teen to take the stand was a 15-year-old from Memorial High School who was also on the football and track team. He said that Metcalf was "like a big brother" to him.
"We all told him to leave," the teen said, referring to Anthony.
He testified that Anthony got "irritated" and "tried to provoke us" as he was asked to leave.
He remembered seeing Metcalf falling down the bleachers with blood on his chest.
He also said that when the team returned to the bus, everyone was crying.
"We couldn't believe what happened," he said.
"Did Karmelo Anthony act in self-defense or commit murder?" the prosecutor asked.
"He committed murder," the teen said.






These were blacks stating this

He was asked 15 times to leave!
 
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He brought a blade to the game, crossed over an sat in the rivals tent, refused to leave being asked 15 time to do so, tried to goad someone into attacking him, got touched and he did what he had planned to do — kill someone.
 
He’s going to get a trial

You of course only want one outcome

BTY there will not be one black person on his jury for some reason
The 4 black witnesses dropped the truth hammer on the killer regardless of jury composition


Ask him him 15 times to leave and he refused. He put himself in that situation and knew what he was about to do
 
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Artist sketch of KA, knife, witness. Knife is at 45 degree angle

So much for the cleat sharpener narrative.

717442444_122128744809193876_443437647034057956_n.jpg

He was on a mission to shank a whitey............
 
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"YOU'RE NOT GOING TO MOVE ME, YOU'RE A B*TCH"
🚨
The 9:54 AM Audio That Just Destroyed The Defense!

They painted him as a terrified, cornered honors student. But a stunning new testimony just exposed the horrific, arrogant words he spat at the victim right before the fatal str!ke. After refusing to leave the tent 15 times, his mask completely slipped.
 
Karmelo Anthony was serving an active suspension from his school at the time of the stabbing incident on April 2, 2025. Because of this suspension, he was not permitted to be on school campuses or attend school athletic events, and he was specifically supposed to be absent from the district track meet where the confrontation occurred

WHOOPS
Up until now, I have heard the opposite, so I was curious about this. I searched the internet and only found it on Facebook pages. It does not seem to be a reputable news story. We would have to wonder why the prosecutor did not bring it up.

Now Metcalf on the other hand did have problems.

But of course maybe Vols can back up this claim.

Ask him him 15 times to leave and he refused.
And not once by an adult that had any authority? If a gang of teens surround you, shove you, scream at you that you have to leave, that starts sounding like self defense.

I get it. I was an athlete too. They think they own the school. The law says differently.

He put himself in that situation and knew what he was about to do
Stand your ground state, so of no legal importance. Anthony was not required to retreat.

the teen said.
What did the adult say? You are putting a lot of stock in the rules as said by kids. The adults, who actually have authority, told them to just leave Anthony alone.
 
Up until now, I have heard the opposite, so I was curious about this. I searched the internet and only found it on Facebook pages. It does not seem to be a reputable news story. We would have to wonder why the prosecutor did not bring it up.

Now Metcalf on the other hand did have problems.

Like?
And not once by an adult that had any authority? If a gang of teens surround you, shove you, scream at you that you have to leave, that starts sounding like self defense.

A reasonable person would have left the tent. What reasonable person would stand their ground for no valid reason when outnumbered and those opposing them are getting increasingly hostile?
I get it. I was an athlete too. They think they own the school. The law says differently.

Karmelo's actions were unreasonable. It is clear the athletes present started off with a reasonable request: Leave their tent as Karmelo had no reason to be present in it and it was for the athletes, not the general public. Karmelo refused, and in testimony, aggressively refused to leave. That ramped up demands he leave. Karmelo's actions led to the physical assault from both directions. He was the root cause because he acted unreasonably.
Stand your ground state, so of no legal importance. Anthony was not required to retreat.

Stand your ground applies to situations where you have a reasonable reason to remain where you are. In this case, it's no different than if Karmelo were in say, a store and being an asshole--which he clearly was doing by all testimony so far--and asked to leave, he has no right to "stand his ground."

Here, he was clearly somewhere he shouldn't have been and was asked in a polite and reasonable way to leave. He refused and became increasingly insulting and aggressive. He caused the situation to escalate when he could have simply left. There was no reason for him to "stand his ground."
What did the adult say? You are putting a lot of stock in the rules as said by kids. The adults, who actually have authority, told them to just leave Anthony alone.
For what reason was Anthony in that tent to begin with? Don't say it's his "right" to be there or some nonsense. Give us some rational reason for his presence in the tent.
 
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