
Teen accused of fatally stabbing Texas track athlete released after posting $250K bond
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Teen stabbed and killed at high school track meet
Students and staff at Memorial High School are remembering Austin Metcalf—a student who was stabbed to death Wednesday at a track meet in Frisco.
Fox - 4 News
A teenager charged in the stabbing death of a Texas track athlete has been released from jail on bond this week.
Karmelo Anthony, 17, was released from jail on a reduced bond on April 14, according to court records and Mike Howard, Anthony's newly-hired defense attorney.
The teen's bond was originally set for $1 million, former counsel for the teen confirmed to USA TODAY last week. Lawyers filed to have it reduced to $150,000, reported NBC 5 DFW and WFAA-TV.
Anthony's bond was ultimately reduced to $250,000, according to court records and Howard. The teen has been issued an electronic monitor and will remain on house arrest, only leaving with court approval, court records say.
Anthony must also be supervised by a parent or adult at all times, and can't have contact with the victim's family. He also has to check in with court bailiffs every Friday, court records show.
In a statement to USA TODAY on April 15, Howard said that Anthony is now back home with his family.
'Karmelo and the entire Anthony family look forward to some quiet time together,' his lawyer wrote. 'They ask for space and time for the full investigation by both sides to play out fairly.'
Anthony was charged with murder in connection to the April 2 stabbing death of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf, according to Frisco police and an arrest warrant affidavit obtained by USA TODAY.
'The police and prosecution want to get it right'
Since the killing on April 2, Anthony's family has created a fundraiser through the platform GiveSendGo, raising over $431,000 of its $500,000 goal as of April 15.
'The narrative being spread is false, unjust, and harmful,' his family wrote in the GiveSendGo fundraiser description. 'As a family of faith, we are deeply grateful for all of your support during this trying period. Your prayers and assistance mean more to us now more than ever.'
The Next Generation Action Network, a civil rights organization in north Texas, has spoken out in support of the Anthony family and said on April 8 that there have been 'escalating racist threats and bigotry directed at the Anthony family.'
'Their personal address has been exposed,' Minister Dominique Alexander, president of the civil rights organization, said during a news conference last week. 'This justice must be fair and impartial, and protected from biases. We do not pull the race card. We live it.'
Howard said threats aren't good for either family involved so he asked the public to allow "the temperature on this" to "come down," NBC 5 DFW reported.
The judge who released Anthony on bond took into consideration his age, his clean record, and whether he was a flight risk, reported NBC 5 DFW.
Anthony's father testified at his bond hearing on April 14, adding that his son has never been in trouble and he does not have a passport. His father said friends and family would make sure Anthony stayed on the right path, NBC 5 DFW reported.
When reporters asked Howard this week why his client had a knife at the track meet that day, he said it's a valid question but the team wasn't ready to answer it.
"The police and prosecution want to get it right and want to have a full and fair investigation, and so do we,' Howard said. 'It would be irresponsible for me, or them, at this point to start saying, 'This is what happened.''
Read more: Texas teen charged with murder in track meet stabbing cites self-defense
'I was protecting myself'
The killing happened the morning of April 2 during a track meet at Frisco Independent School District's Kuykendall Stadium.
Metcalf was a student at Memorial High School and was participating in a track meet that day, police said. A witness called for help around 10 a.m. about an altercation between the two teens in which Metcalf was stabbed. First responders tried to save Metcalf but he was eventually pronounced dead, police said.
A school resource officer was the first to arrive, according to the arrest warrant affidavit obtained by USA TODAY. The officer recalled telling Anthony to put his hands up, to which the teen allegedly replied "I was protecting myself." Anthony said Metcalf put his hands on him, admitted to stabbing Metcalf, and asked 'Is he going to be OK?"
During the investigation, one witness said he was sitting under a Memorial High School tent with the team and Metcalf and Anthony were sitting nearby, according to the affidavit. Anthony, who was not a member of the team, was sitting under the team's tent. That's when Metcalf told Anthony he needed to move, the witness told authorities, per the court document.
'Anthony grabbed his bag, opened it and reached inside and proceeded to tell (Metcalf) 'Touch me and see what happens,'' the affidavit read.
Metcalf then touched Anthony, who told Metcalf to punch him and see what happens, according to the witness. Metcalf grabbed Anthony and again told him to get from under the team's tent, then Anthony pulled out a knife and stabbed Metcalf once in the chest before running away, the witness said.
Metcalf grabbed at his chest and told people to get help, per the affidavit. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Austin Metcalf's father: 'Maybe we can learn from this'
Since his death, multiple fundraisers for the Metcalf family have been created. As of April 15, the fundraisers have garnered nearly $530,000.
Loved ones celebrated Metcalf at a memorial service on April 12, reported KDFW-TV. According to the outlet, the teen was a twin, and he died in his brother's arms on April 2. The weekend before his death, the teens went hunting with their father, Jeff Metcalf.
"I'm so fortunate to be able to spend that weekend, not knowing it was the last weekend I'll ever spend with him," their father said, per the Dallas, Texas-based TV station. "I was able to watch and be blessed, so much, to have such, both my sons are amazing. My other son is just crushed. I feel for him now, he won't be the same. None of us will."
His father found out about his son's stabbing when a coach called him, he told KDFW-TV. He recalled seeing his son on the gurney. He's still in shock about the death of his son, he told the TV station.
"I pray that maybe there's changes made as far as security," he said. "Maybe we can learn from this, and try to turn a tragedy into something positive to make sure it doesn't happen to anyone else's child ... His brother was holding him, trying to hold the blood in. My son watched his brother die in his arms."
He said he had forgiven the person who stabbed his son, adding that he feels sorry for his son's killer because he had made a mistake that would change his life forever.
"To be taken away, it's such a tragedy," his father said, per KDFW-TV. "I feel numb ... I do hope for justice because this is unacceptable."
Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Email her at sdmartin@usatoday.com.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Few National Guard troops seen patrolling DC as residents oppose deployment
The White House said the National Guard would establish a "physical presence" in Washington, D.C., but troops were nowhere to be seen on the National Mall or across neighborhoods. WASHINGTON - Residents and tourists in the nation's capitol woke up to relatively few National Guard troops patrolling the streets Aug. 13 amid President Donald Trump's sweeping crackdown on crime and homelessness. Trump mobilized 800 members of the guard and ordered the city's Metropolitan Police Department be brought under the control of the Justice Department. White House officials said between 100 and 200 troops would provide administrative and logistical support to local law enforcement at any given time, along with a "physical presence" in the city. "You will see them flowing into the streets of Washington in the coming weeks," Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said at an Aug. 12 news conference. "They will be strong. They will be tough." Mayor Muriel Bowser's staff said on Aug. 12 that the largest part of the surge would happen overnight, and the city planned to keep the guardsmen near tourist hotspots like the national monuments. Commanders of the Guard's 273rd Military Police Company shared images on social media of armored Humvees parked next to the Washington Monument. But National Guards troops were nowhere to be seen along the National Mall, where tourists walked from monument to monument and an increased police presence could be seen standing on sidewalks and in their squad cars.A roaming group of federal agents and park police patrolled the area and at one point stopped in front of a homeless man and ordered him to move, which he did peacefully.A Park Police helicopter flew around the mall in low circles. There were no National Guard troops to be seen. Even the area where a former DOGE staffer was assaulted while intervening in an unarmed carjacking - an example of violent crime in the city highlighted by the White House - was quiet with little law enforcement presence. Area residents told USA TODAY that Trump's actions were excessive and a waste of taxpayer dollars. 'It's unbelievable,' said Isaiah Walter, who was born and raised in Congress Heights, a majority-Black neighborhood in southeast D.C. Violent crime is highest in the southeastern corner of the city known as Ward 8, which includes Congress Heights, Navy Yard and Anacostia, according to an interactive map on the city government's website. But despite that, Walter said he has seen the city become safer over his lifetime, especially in the last several years following the pandemic. 'I don't think it's needed,' he said. Though many residents have expressed disapproval, some have shown support for the president's decision. While out on a walk with her child on Aug. 12, Rebecca Harkey told Reuters that crime had made her consider leaving the capital and that it was "very much an active fear" in her life. Contributing: Trevor Hughes, Michael Loria and Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY; Reuters


USA Today
20 hours ago
- USA Today
'He said that he was Jesus': Police release details on deadly Texas Target shooting
The three people killed outside a Target in Austin, Texas, on Aug. 11 were identified, including a 4-year-old and a store employee. The man suspected of fatally shooting three people, including a child, in a Target parking lot in Austin, Texas, told police that he was Jesus and obtained a firearm through a family member despite a history of mental health issues, authorities said. Police identified the shooter as Ethan Nieneker, 32, and said that he began his attack by fatally shooting Target employee Hector Leopoldo Martinez Machuca as he collected shopping carts on Aug. 11. Nieneker then ran up to a gray Toyota 4-Runner, and fatally shot Adam Chow and his 4-year-old granddaughter before pushing Chow's wife from the vehicle, police said in a news release. Chow's wife survived with minor injuries. "What happened yesterday was an unprovoked and deliberate attack, a deliberate act of violence," Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis said on Aug. 12. "Innocent lives were taken in broad daylight, in a place where people should feel safe to run their everyday errands and to live their everyday lives." USA TODAY is working to reach an attorney or family member who can speak on Nieneker's behalf. Chaotic timeline following deadly Target shooting Following the killings at 2:15 p.m. CT, police say that Nieneker stole Chow's car and made a chaotic getaway, assaulting multiple people and stealing cars along the way. Here's a timeline released by authorities: Charges, motive, and what we know about Ethan Nieneker Davis said Nieneker worked at a local restaurant and lived alone. He's been charged with two counts of capital murder and first-degree felony murder. Police said he will face more charges related to the subsequent assaults and carjackings. As for a motive, police Sgt. Nathan Sexton said there was "really no reason whatsoever given." "He said that he was Jesus," Sexton said. "It was a completely random choosing of the victims." Sexton said the handgun used in the attack was "acquired through family" and that the department was investigating possible charges against the family member. Davis said Nieneker's history with Austin police included assault causing bodily injury to a family member, driving under the influence, violation of a protective order, marijuana possession, and two mental health reports. "This man had some serious issues, and I think about the systems that failed in a way, as we move forward," she said. "We're looking at this background, and again, this is going to be things that are going to be coming up in the months and the years ahead. There were some serious failures here." 'Pain caused will be felt by our community for years to come' Davis declined to detail who failed Nieneker or exactly how, and said she did not know if he had been officially diagnosed. "What help are they getting when you're dealing with someone with these issues?" Davis asked. "Where does someone with this capacity to do this get a weapon? And when does a family member feel comfortable giving someone with these issues a weapon?" She called the case "a heartbreaking and deeply painful time for our city." "The actions of the suspect showed a complete disregard for human life," she added. "The pain caused will be felt by our community for years to come." Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at and follow her on X at @AmandaLeeUSAT


USA Today
21 hours ago
- USA Today
South Carolina lawmaker resigns after arrest on child sex abuse material charges
A state lawmaker in South Carolina resigned from his seat months after being arrested for alleged distribution of child sexual abuse material, the state's House speaker announced on Aug. 11. RJ May, a 38-year-old Republican state representative and former South Carolina House Freedom Caucus strategist, was accused of using the screen name 'joebidennnn69' on the social media network Kik to exchange 220 different files of toddlers and young children. 'I have decided that it is in the best interest of my family and constituents to resign immediately from the South Carolina House of Representatives,' reads a resignation letter sent from May to the state's House Speaker Murrell Smith and obtained by local media outlets, including the Post and Courier and South Carolina Daily Gazette. In a statement, the South Carolina House Freedom Caucus, which May helped found, said the resignation is 'long overdue.' 'The people of District 88 deserve true and honorable representation," the statement said. According to court records obtained by USA TODAY, May exchanged the explicit files across five days in spring 2024. The records say the files were uploaded and downloaded on May's home Wi-Fi network and on his cellphone. In a June press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office, officials said May faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, a fine of $250,000 and five years of probation. May is being held at the Edgefield County jail, awaiting the start of his trial. May's legal representation did not immediately respond to USA TODAY's request for comment on Aug. 12. Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.