Karmelo Anthony supporter fired from parole supervisor gig after vile comment about Austin Metcalf

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Karmelo Anthony supporters continue to voice their concerns and frustrations following his conviction and sentencing for murder.

Anthony was found guilty and sentenced to 35 years behind bars on Tuesday, June 9, after he stabbed and killed 17-year-old Austin Metcalf at a Frisco, Texas, high school track meet last year.

His supporters maintain the convicted killer was acting in self-defense when he stabbed Metcalf.

One of them is Donna Robinson, a parole supervisor within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. The Dallas Morning News reported she made a comment on Facebook that cost her her job.

Karmelo Anthony is accused of killing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf last April at a Frisco track meet at David Kuykendall Stadium. Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice
Austin Metcalf, a junior at Memorial High School in Frisco, was stabbed in the chest allegedly by 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony, a student-athlete from Frisco Centennial High School.
Meghan Prall Metcalf/Facebook

Addressing comments about the sentencing, she wrote “that Anthony would be protected in prison, adding she didn’t care about the victim’s family’s loss,” according to the outlet.

Fox News Digital also reported Howard University professor Stacey Patton wrote an opinion article on her Substack, “Dear Jeff Metcalf: Your Son Is Dead Because You Failed to Teach Him That Black Boys Have Boundaries,” which essentially blames the victim for the killing.

An Austin Metcalf supporter holds a sign in front of the Collin County courthouse after the verdict was reached in the Karmelo Anthony trial Tuesday, June 9, 2026, in McKinney, Texas. AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez
Many supporters of Karmelo Anthony believe that he acted in self-defense and that his actions do not constitute a crime. The Dallas Morning News via Getty Images
Supporters of both sides clash outside of the courthouse before the guilty verdict was announced in the murder trial. The Dallas Morning News via Getty Images

Another supporter, W. Burlette Carter, who is a professor emerita of law at George Washington University, made her concerns with the trial public following the verdict.


Here’s the latest on Karmelo Anthony’s murder conviction:


She made a post on X that said, “Karmelo Anthony was entitled to a jury of his peers. He did not get that. On that ground alone, he is entitled to a new trial. Minorities are not interchangeable. The prosecutor’s reported proffered reasons for striking all black jurors —that they were teachers—appears to be pretext. Anthony needs a new lawyer on appeal and in a new trial.”

A courtroom sketch shows the district attorney pointing at Karmelo Anthony, center, at the defense table in opening arguments Thursday, June 4, 2026. AP

Anthony’s trial was made up of jurors who are fellow US citizens — also known as a “jury of one’s peers.” In all criminal prosecutions, the US Constitution says the accused has “the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to Howard University, TDCJ and Burlette Carter for comment.

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