Karmelo Anthony has initiated an appeal against his 35-year prison sentence for the murder of Austin Metcalf, new court documents reveal.
Just a day after receiving his sentence, the 19-year-old Anthony filed a notice of appeal on Wednesday. He was convicted of fatally stabbing Metcalf in the heart during an April 2025 track meet, as reported in legal documents shared by TMZ.
Anthonyâs attorney, Mike Howard, explained to the outlet that they had informed the court of their intention to appeal immediately following the trialâs conclusion.
âWe believe there are several important issues for the appellate courts to consider. An appeal is the next part of the legal process and a right afforded every American,â Howard stated.
In contrast, a source close to the Metcalf family expressed satisfaction with the verdict, telling TMZ they are âvery happyâ with the sentence handed down to Anthony.
The case has drawn significant public attention across the United States, particularly due to its racial dynamics, as Metcalf was white and Anthony is black.
Anthony, who was 17 at the time of the fatal attack, sobbed in court on Tuesday, and his family burst into tears as the judge handed down the verdict.Â
His mother begged the jury to show him mercy as an audible gasp was heard inside the courtroom when his sentence was handed down hours later.Â
Karmelo Anthony has launched an appeal fighting his 35 year prison sentence for murdering Austin Metcalf, according to newly filed court records
Metcalf was bled out in his brotherâs arms after Anthony stabbed him to death at a track meet in Frisco in April 2025
Throughout the trial, Anthony and his legal team have claimed that he stabbed Metcalf in an act of self-defense after they got into a confrontation during a rain delay at the sporting event.Â
Metcalf called out Anthony for standing under a tent that did not belong to his school, the Frisco Police Department said.
Anthony had originally faced between five to 99 years in prison for knifing Metcalf, but after the verdict was passed at the Collin County courthouse on Tuesday, prosecutors agreed to consider âsudden passionâ as a factor when determining his sentence.
âSudden passionâ is a legal term in Texas that allows a criminal to argue they were in an intense emotional state when they committed wrongdoing. It would have reduced Anthonyâs murder to a second-degree felony, for which he could have served as little as two years behind bars.
It was then left up to the jury to decide whether to apply the âsudden passionâ argument to the case and reduce Anthonyâs murder charge or stick to their original verdict.
The jury then spent less than three hours passing its guilty verdict, and another roughly two and a half hours before they handed down their sentence.
Anthony will now have to serve at least half of the sentence before he is eligible for parole.
Metcalfâs father, Jeff Metcalf, delivered an emotionally intense victim impact statement after his sonâs killer was found guilty.Â
Metcalf called out Anthony for standing under a tent that did not belong to his school on the day of the deadly encounter, the Frisco Police Department said
He demanded that Anthony look at him as he said: âYouâre going to prison. You canât even look me in the eyes right now, but you can stab my f***ing son in the heart.âÂ
His grieving father further described the âunfiltered rageâ he feels over his sonâs death.
âIf you ask me what my sonâs death did to me, I would tell you it destroyed the person I used to be. Not changed me, destroyed me,â Jeff told the court.
He said he forgave Anthony âthe day it happenedâ but did not forgive âwhat you did.â
Jeff said his family was ârobbedâ of seeing Austin grow up and regretted he wasnât there to defend his son at the sporting event in April 2025.
âPeople think that grief is sadness but itâs not. ITâS RAGE!!! Pure unfiltered rage,â Jeff shouted as he slammed his fist down.
âMy sonâs death didnât just break my heart,â he continued, claiming it also destroyed âmy sense of safety, my faith in people.â
Jeff also struck down arguments that the case was about race â as Anthony is a black teenager and Metcalf was white.
Instead, he argued, the case was about âright and wrong.â
Metcalfâs father, Jeff Metcalf (pictured with his late son), delivered an emotionally intense victim impact statement after his sonâs killer was found guilty
âWeâre all humans. We all bleed the same color,â Jeff noted, before addressing Anthony himself.Â
Metcalfâs mother, Meghan, and his twin brother, Hunter, also delivered emotional statements.
Hunter, who held his brother in his arms while he bled out that day, started off by telling Anthony: âIf you could just look me in the eye while I speak, I would really respect that.â
But Anthony kept looking down as Hunter said he wanted âeverything to be takenâ from him.Â
âYou took a son, a brother, a friend, and my best friend, from this world,â Hunter said, getting emotional. âYou took someone from me who was supposed to be an uncle, godfather to my kids. Now I want everything taken from you.â
Meghan said she was left âcrushedâ by Austinâs death and seeing the effect it had on Hunter.
âSeeing my loving son, his identical twin, lose the most important person in his life, it crushes you as a mother,â she said.