Karmelo Anthony Files an Appeal, but There's a Big Problem
Karmelo Anthony has been convicted of murder for
the deadly stabbing of Austin Metcalf, 17, which happened at a high
school track meet in Frisco, Texas, in 2025. The case drew national
attention because Anthony is black and Metcalf is white. Some of the
reactions were extreme, though not everyone shared that view, as we
often see from liberals regarding anything Trump does. Several black
commentators rightfully pointed out that Anthony murdered the kid and
received what he deserved in court. He was sentenced to 35 years, with
the possibility of parole after 17. He has filed an appeal, but there’s a
problem: he has no money for a lawyer (via NY Post):
Convicted killer Karmelo Anthony has claimed he’s
“penniless” and can’t afford a lawyer for his appeal — despite his
family collecting $625,000 in crowdfunding for his legal defense and
“living expenses,” according to a report.
Anthony, 19, made the
assertion in a notice of appeal filed after he was found guilty of
fatally stabbing 17-year-old Austin Metcalf and sentenced to 35 years
behind bars, according to a report by ABC WFAA.
Anthony — who was
moved to a Texas state prison Wednesday — is “penniless, destitute, and
indigent person, too poor to employ counsel to represent me on the
appeal,” reads the appeal form.
Anthony’s defense attorney, Mike
Howard,
said the defense has “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.”
The GiveSendGo
fundraising page that collected over a million dollars for Anthony’s
family was shut down not long after his conviction. Jury selection is
reportedly one of the areas that will be included in the appeal (via CBS News):
Dallas
appellate attorney David Coale, who was not involved in the case, said
the strongest issues on appeal may have little to do with the evidence
jurors heard and more to do with whether the trial was conducted
properly.
"The first is, are we in the right county or should we
be in Collin County?" Coale said. "Then we go to the race issue because
before we even start the trial, we've got to have a jury. Did we do that
right? And then once we got the trial going and heard all the evidence,
did we tell the jury what to do correctly?"
Coale said one issue
likely to resurface is the defense's claim that Black jurors were
improperly removed from the panel during jury selection, potentially
violating what's known as Batson law, which prohibits attorneys from
excluding jurors solely because of race.
"And the argument is,
it's not so much that the jury pool is all white," Coale said. "The
problem is when the jurors were struck ... the Anthony argument is that
the prosecution used it to get rid of the black jurors.
Well, first, the jury was not all-white. And second, this appeal should be crushed immediately.
No comments:
Post a Comment