06/16/2026
We Covered the Austin Metcalf–Karmelo Anthony Trial. Here Is the Part We Are Still Missing.
we covered the Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony case from the Collin County courthouse. we listened to the testimony, watched the verdict come in, and saw how quickly the case became a national fight over race, self-defense and justice.
Some of my reports reached more than a million people.
But after the trial ended, one question stayed with me: How did an argument between two 17-year-old boys at a school track meet leave one boy dead and the other sentenced to 35 years in prison?
That is the part we still do not want to face.
The Case Became an Argument
The case became an argument almost immediately. Race. Self-defense. The jury. The justice system. Who was being treated fairly and who was not. People picked a side and stayed there. But before all of that, there were two boys at a track meet. The argument did not begin over something major. It started during a rain delay, under a school tent, over space. Words were exchanged. Things became physical. A knife came out. One boy died, and the other entered the criminal justice system. That is what makes this case so difficult to shake. There is no winning side here.
What Both Families Now Carry
Austin’s family lost a son. Karmelo’s family lost the future they thought their son would have. Those losses are not the same, but both families are living with consequences that will follow them for years. Austin’s father has spoken about the hole left in his family. He has also spoken about forgiveness, not because he approves of what happened, but because he does not want anger to take over the rest of his life. At the same time, he believes the sentence should have been longer. That makes sense to me. A person can forgive and still want accountability.
Karmelo’s parents believe their son did not receive a fair trial. They believe race affected the case, and they are supporting the appeal. The jury heard the evidence and rejected the self-defense argument. That is where the legal case stands. But the legal case is not the only thing worth talking about. The part that bothers me most is what happened before the knife came out.
The Moments Before Everything Changed
Why did the argument keep going? Why did nobody walk away? Why was there a knife at a school track meet? What was happening in those few seconds when pride, fear, anger, and pressure all met at the same time? We often tell boys to make better choices, but that advice means very little if we have never shown them what to do when they feel embarrassed, threatened, or challenged in front of other people.
Boys hear a lot about being strong. They hear that they should stand up for themselves. They hear that they should not let anyone disrespect them. But they do not always hear enough about restraint. They are not always taught how to leave a bad situation without feeling weak. They are not always given the words to use. They are not always shown when to call a coach, a teacher, a parent, or another adult. They are also not always warned about what happens when fear and adrenaline take over.
“Walk Away” Is Not Enough
It is easy to say “walk away” after a tragedy. It is harder to do when you are 17, people are watching, and you think backing down will make you look afraid. That is why these conversations have to happen before the moment comes. Schools practice fire drills, lockdowns, and storm procedures. But students rarely practice what to do when someone gets in their face, pushes them, insults them, or challenges them in front of their friends.
Most of the advice is still too vague. “Don’t fight.” “Tell an adult.” “Walk away.” But what does that actually look like in the moment? What do you say? Where do you move? How do you create space? How do you get help without making the situation worse? Those are things young people can be taught, but not through one assembly and not only after someone dies. They need to be practiced.
Where the Adults Come In
Parents need to talk about it. Coaches need to talk about it. Mentors need to talk about it. We also need to stop sending boys the message that walking away is weakness. Sometimes walking away is the smartest decision a person will ever make. Sometimes the strong move is not the loud one. Sometimes getting an adult involved is what keeps a bad moment from becoming a funeral or a prison sentence.
That is also why mentorship matters so much. We still treat mentoring like a nice extra, something communities do when funding is available. But for some boys, a mentor may be the only adult helping them think through anger, pride, fear, consequences, and the pressure to prove something. The results of good mentoring are hard to measure because often nothing happens. The fight does not happen. The weapon stays at home. The argument ends. The boy calls an adult. There is no headline, but a life may have been saved.
What Punishment Cannot Do
Karmelo’s sentence will satisfy some people and disappoint others. But no sentence can teach the next boy what to do before a confrontation gets out of control. Punishment comes after the damage. The work of prevention still belongs to the rest of us. Schools need better conflict training. Coaches need clearer procedures during athletic events. Parents need to have direct conversations with their sons about weapons, anger, peer pressure, and consequences. Mentoring programs need to make emotional control and conflict management part of the main work, not a side lesson.
None of this will stop every act of violence. But doing nothing means we will keep having the same conversation after another family is broken.
After the Verdict
The courtroom has done its job for now. Karmelo Anthony was convicted. He was sentenced to 35 years. The appeal will move forward. But the bigger question is still there: why are so many boys reaching moments of conflict without knowing how to leave them safely?
Austin’s family will never get him back. Karmelo’s family will never return to the life they had before that morning. The public will eventually move on. Another argument between two boys will happen somewhere else, and it may start over something just as small. What happens next may depend on what those boys were taught before that moment came.
Dr. Owolabi Williams is the founder of Boys Lead Foundation and a male-development advocate focused on the leadership, well-being, and formation of boys and young men. He covered the Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony trial from the Collin County courthouse.
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