Karmelo Anthony Officially Transferred to Texas State Prison Less Than 24 Hours After Sentencing

The gavel had barely fallen before the state moved fast. Less than 24 hours after being sentenced to 35 years in prison for the murder of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf, 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony was transported out of Collin County and officially entered the Texas Department of Criminal Justice system.

New Prison Photo Released

Karmelo Anthony's New Mugshot Revealed as He's Transferred to State PrisonA photograph of Anthony inside the state prison system was released within the last half hour of the initial broadcast, confirming his transfer. According to authorities, Anthony is currently being held at the Wallace Pack Unit near Navasota — a facility located approximately 70 miles northwest of Houston. The young man who spent the duration of his trial under house arrest is now behind prison walls, and the clock on his sentence has officially begun.

Anthony Files Immediate Appeal — And Calls Himself “Destitute”

On the same day he was transferred, Anthony wasted no time filing a notice of appeal with the Fifth Court of Appeals in Dallas. But it was the language inside that document that caught immediate attention.

In his own words, Anthony describes himself as “penniless, destitute and indigent” — too poor to hire his own legal counsel. He closed the filing with a direct plea to the court: “I pray that the court will appoint an attorney to represent me in this appeal.”

The admission is striking given that Anthony’s family had previously received significant public fundraising support throughout the trial process, with online campaigns drawing hundreds of thousands of dollars from supporters across the country.

Legal Experts: The Appeal Is Standard, Not a Sign of Innocence

Criminal defense attorney Bree West, who has no involvement in the Anthony case, was quick to offer important context for the public.

“This process is not over,” West said. “I think it’s important that people understand that the appellate process is a necessary part of our criminal justice system.”

West emphasized that filing an appeal after a conviction of this magnitude is not unusual — it is, in fact, the expected next step. Appeals are routinely filed to ensure that any objections raised during trial that were overruled receive proper review by a higher court. An appeal being filed does not mean the verdict was wrong or that the system failed.

“You’re going to always appeal on sizable sentences,” West explained, “to make sure that some higher court is going to say to that lower court — you did that right, or you didn’t.”

Crucially, Anthony’s 35-year sentence continues to run while the appeal plays out.

What Comes Next for Karmelo Anthony

Karmelo Anthony granted house arrest over fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf as family reveals plans for donated funds | The Independent

Under Texas law, Anthony must serve at least half of his 35-year sentence — more than 17 years — before he becomes eligible for parole. However, legal analysts were careful to note that parole eligibility and parole release are not the same thing. Whether Anthony will actually be granted parole at that point is an entirely separate decision made by a body within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Anthony also has no say in where he serves his sentence. In the state of Texas, the department determines placement — not the convict.

For the family of Austin Metcalf, who lost their son to a four-inch knife at a high school track meet, the transfer marks the beginning of a new chapter in a case that divided an entire community. For Karmelo Anthony, it marks the first day of what could be nearly two decades behind bars before he even gets a chance to ask for freedom.

Compiled from various sources.