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Attorneys for Karmelo Anthony file appeal for new trial, demand judge’s recusal
By OAN Staff Brooke Mallory - 7/7/2026, 5:30 PM - 670 words
Faulty reasoning signals
- Confirmation Bias - 5.2% (35 hits)
- Anchoring Bias - 0%
- Availability Heuristic - 5.2% (35 hits)
- Representativeness Heuristic - 0%
- Hindsight Bias - 0%
- Overconfidence Bias - 0%
- Framing Effect - 9.6% (64 hits)
- Loss Aversion - 6% (40 hits)
- Status Quo Bias - 4% (27 hits)
- Sunk Cost Effect - 0%
- Optimism Bias - 3.4% (23 hits)
- Pessimism Bias - 4.8% (32 hits)
Article text
Attorneys for Karmelo Anthony file appeal for new trial, demand judge’s recusal
Appellate attorneys representing convicted murderer Karmelo Anthony have officially filed a legal challenge to his first-degree murder conviction, requesting a new trial and demanding the recusal of the presiding judge.
Anthony was convicted and sentenced to 35 years in prison by a Collin County jury following his fatal April 2, 2025, stabbing of 17-year-old Memorial High School student Austin Metcalf during a track meet at David Kuykendall Stadium in Frisco, Texas.
The media-frenzied trial, which concluded last month, centered on whether Anthony, a Centennial High School athlete who was also 17 at the time of the incident, acted in self-defense or committed what prosecutors maintain was a premeditated ambush.
Anthony’s newly retained legal team has since filed a verified motion seeking to recuse Collin County District Judge John Roach from all remaining post-trial matters.
The appellate defense team consists of a six-attorney "coalition" working pro bono, and the team was reportedly assembled with the help of civil rights attorney Lee Merritt.
**It is officially led by:**
* **Russell Wilson II** – A Dallas-based defense attorney.
* **Gary Bledsoe** – The longtime president of the Texas NAACP.
The pro bono legal team stepped in to handle the post-conviction process.
The defense argues that Judge Roach compromised his impartiality by making problematic public statements to the media, defending his own restrictive courtroom-access policies before a higher court could review them.
According to their filing, "public statements expressing the judge's probable decision on any motion for a new trial that may be filed."
> In simpler terms, the defense is saying that because the judge already talked to the media about his decisions, anyone looking at the situation fairly would assume he has already made up his mind.
They argue that if the judge is asked to give Anthony a new trial, he won’t actually be fair or open-minded because he already publicly defended how he handled the first trial.
The motion further states that the court publicly defended the very courtroom-access restrictions that Anthony challenges as having denied him a public trial, putting the judge in a position where he would be required to rule on a challenge to his own rulings after publicly committing, in the media, to those rulings' correctness.
The "Stand With Karmelo Coalition," which assembled the pro bono appellate team to spearhead the effort, released a formal statement outlining their intent to scrutinize the trial proceedings for constitutional violations and legal errors.
The coalition stated that their appellate team has been retained following the conviction to conduct a fresh, independent review of the trial record.
Nonetheless, the pro bono lawyers also added that they "recognize the profound loss suffered by one young man's family and the uncertainty facing another, and they extend their respect to everyone whose lives have been forever changed by these events."
The coalition stated that their responsibility is to determine whether a legal error occurred and to ensure that every issue supported by the record is fully and vigorously presented on appeal, concluding that the appellate process exists for precisely this purpose.
Meanwhile, the legal maneuver reignites a case that has gripped the public both locally and nationally, exposing deep divisions over race and the boundaries of self-defense.
During the trial, the defense tried to argue that Anthony pulled the knife "out of fear for his life" after being cornered and shoved from a rival school's tent.
Prosecutors, however, successfully countered that Anthony was actually the aggressor who intentionally provoked the fatal confrontation.
Immediately following the sentencing, Collin County District Attorney Greg Willis announced that justice was served and praised the efforts of the jurors, prosecutors and the Metcalf family.
The defense team, led by Dallas attorney Russell Wilson and joined by Texas NAACP President Gary Bledsoe, continues to review the full trial transcripts as Anthony serves his sentence at a Texas Department of Criminal Justice facility.
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