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'You failed your son first': Howard prof blames father's values after Karmelo Anthony murdered his son

Howard University professor Dr. Stacey Patton blames Austin Metcalf's father for his son's death, alleging his parenting failed to teach boundaries.

Published June 12, 2026, 8:07 PM
Updated June 12, 2026, 8:23 PM2.9K
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'You failed your son first': Howard prof blames father's values after Karmelo Anthony murdered his son

Karmelo Anthony sentenced to 35 years for Austin Metcalf murder, appeal grounds discussed

Karmelo Anthony, convicted of first-degree murder in the fatal stabbing of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf at a Texas track meet, receives a 35-year prison sentence. Jeff Metcalf delivers a powerful victim impact statement. Former U.S. Attorney Cully Stimson discusses grounds for an appeal, including a 'Batson claim' regarding jury selection, as protests over alleged racial bias continue outside the McKinney courthouse.

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A Howard University professor tore into the victim-impact statement delivered by the father of slain Texas teen Austin Metcalf, arguing that the teen's death "did not begin with the knife" wielded by Karmelo Anthony but instead that his father's parenting style was to be blamed as well.

Dr. Stacey Patton, a professor at Howard University's School of Communications, penned an opinion piece titled "Dear Jeff Metcalf: Your Son Is Dead Because You Failed to Teach Him That Black Boys Have Boundaries" to Substack on Wednesday on Substack, where she insinuated Anthony was acting out of self-defense.

"YOU failed to teach your boy that Black children have boundaries," Patton wrote. "YOU failed teach humility, restraint, or the sacred fact that another person’s body is not your jurisdiction. YOU failed to teach him that another child’s space is not a challenge to be conquered. YOU failed to teach him that "community" does not mean white boys get to decide who belongs and who does not."

Patton's piece was published a day after Anthony was sentenced to 35 years in prison for the murder of Metcalf. The case drew national after now 19-year-old Anthony stabbed 17-year-old Metcalf in the heart during a confrontation at a high school track meeting in April 2025. The case has become a flashpoint in broader debates about race, with Anthony's supporters arguing he has been treated differently because he is Black, while critics have rejected efforts to make the murder of Metcalf, a white teenager, about race.

GRIEVING TEXAS FATHER SPEAKS OUT AFTER SON WAS STABBED TO DEATH AT HIGH SCHOOL TRACK MEET

Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony

Left: Austin Metcalf is pictured. Right: Karmelo Anthony is pictured in a mugshot after being taken into custody following his murder conviction. (Jeff Metcalf; Collin County Sheriff's Office)

"YOU obviously failed to teach your son that touching, confronting, crowding, testing, or policing another person can have consequences," Patton wrote. "And YOU failed to teach him that the same world that cheers white boys for being bold and aggressive will not always be there to save them when they mistake somebody else’s restraint for permission."

She blasted Jeff for saying that Anthony had failed his parents in his decision to murder his son.

"It is easier to stand in a courtroom and call Karmelo Anthony a failure than it is to admit that Austin’s death did not begin with the knife," Patton wrote. "It began with every lesson that told your son that he had the right to approach, challenge, and cross a boundary. It began with every adult who smiled at white boy entitlement and called it leadership. It began with every cultural script that taught him Black boys are the ones to be feared, but never taught him that Black boys might also be afraid.

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Jeff Metcalf speaking at a podium during a public event.

Jeff Metcalf speaks about the stabbing death of his son, Austin Metcalf, at a high school track meet. (Jeff Metcalf)

She also alleged that Jeff's victim-impact statement was rooted in racism, homing in on Jeff saying that Anthony does "not belong" in the community because of what he did.

"You don’t belong in this community" is not just a father’s grief spilling over," Patton wrote. "It is a declaration of removal. And it is the language of somebody who believes he has the authority to decide who gets to stay, who must disappear, and whose presence contaminates the social order. Like father, like son."

"Your words landed on top of centuries of Black children being told they do not belong in white schools, neighborhoods, playgrounds, pools, churches, white juries, white imaginations, and white definitions of innocence," Patton continues. "They landed on top of every Black boy this country has turned into a threat before he ever had a chance to be a child."

AUSTIN METCALF'S FAMILY HIT WITH DEATH THREATS AS KARMELO ANTHONY SUPPORTERS FACE VIOLENCE ALLEGATIONS

She claimed that his son was not the only victim in this case and that Anthony' family was also grieving.

Jeff Metcalf standing with his son Austin Metcalf outdoors

Jeff Metcalf stands with his son Austin Metcalf, a junior at Memorial High School in Frisco, who was stabbed in the chest at a track meet, allegedly by 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony from Frisco Centennial High School. (Courtesy Jeff Metcalf)

"Austin is dead. Your family is devastated," Patton wrote. "That matters. Karmelo Anthony is alive but caged inside a racial imagination that had already convicted him. And that matters, too. Two families are shattered. And a whole country is using the tragedy to rehearse the same old script about Black guilt and white innocence."

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Patton defended her opinion piece as a "critique of racial power" and said that she was not, "blaming a dead child, attacking a grieving father, excusing violence, and rejecting the legal system."

"My argument is simple: Black children are children," Patton said. "They do not become monsters because white America needs one, and their humanity is not up for debate because a verdict has been rendered."

"Now, run along and feed your propaganda machine," she added, declining to answer several of Fox News Digital's questions. "I'm sure it's hungry for another Black woman's words to mutilate. That is my statement."

Fox News Digital reached out to Howard University and Metcalf's family for comment.

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Patton's Substack piece is the latest in a growing chorus of voices arguing that the murder case is rooted in race.

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, questioned on her podcast whether Karmelo Anthony's race played a role in his conviction. Crockett asked whether Anthony received a fair trial, spreading a false claim that all jurors were white and that could have impacted their ability to be impartial.

"I’m not necessarily convinced — not that I could tell you the name of one person on this jury — that we had 12 impartial white folk out of Collin County sitting on a jury for this young black man," Crockett said.

Crocket also suggested black mothers have faced far greater agony on a day-to-day basis than the victim's family.

"Black women, especially black women who have black male children, live in fear and agony every single day," she lamented. "A fear and agony that I promise you the Metcalfs probably had never spend a day living that way."

Elaine Mallon is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business covering national politics. 

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