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Crockett's Interview: A "Broken System" and a 35-Year Sentence
Representative Jasmine Crockett gave a full on-camera interview responding to Karmelo Anthony's guilty verdict and 35-year sentence for the murder of Austin Metcalf. Her opening position: the verdict was evidence of a broken system.
Crockett described the fatal wound as a single strike — roughly two inches — delivered with what she called a multi-tool rather than a traditional knife, and questioned whether the sentencing reflected the reality of what happened. She pointed to the wide range available under Texas law — five years to 99 or life — and argued the jury failed to weigh how intentional or serious the act truly was.
"35 years for a kid who had decided to go out under a tent that was not his team's tent as it was raining," Crockett said, "and simply didn't want to be put out in the rain by some random kid that he didn't know who was larger than him."
She also questioned why the charge was not reduced to manslaughter given the circumstances, and said that because the blade was short enough to not constitute unlawful carrying under Texas law, the severity of the punishment did not match the act.
Race, Collin County, and the Jury
When asked directly whether race played a role in the verdict, Crockett said she had no doubt that it did. She described Collin County — located just north of Dallas — as a county where she had personally seen cases play out differently because of the county they were filed in.
"I would guarantee you it wouldn't have happened," she said when asked whether a white boy in Anthony's position would have received the same sentence. "I don't even know if he would have been convicted. If a white boy said they were afraid of a Black boy, something tells me that jury — that didn't have any Black people on it — would have believed him."
The narrator of this commentary responds by pointing out that Crockett, a former practicing attorney, never once condemned Anthony's actions across the entire interview. She placed the full weight of responsibility on Austin Metcalf and on racial bias, and offered no acknowledgment of the facts the jury heard at trial.
The Metcalf Family Compared to the Daily Fear of Black Mothers
In a separate podcast appearance, Crockett escalated her commentary. She argued that the grief of Austin Metcalf's family over losing their son does not compare to the fear and agony that Black mothers of Black sons carry every single day in America.
"Black women, especially Black women who have Black male children, live in fear and agony every single day," Crockett said. "A fear and agony that I promise you the Metcalfs probably never spent a day living that way."
The narrator's reaction is pointed: Crockett is not grieving for a system that failed — she is using victimhood as a political weapon, ranking the suffering of a family that lost their child below what she presents as the superior claim of Black suffering in America.
"I Would Have Done the Same Thing"
Crockett also stated that if she were in Anthony's position — pinned down by a much larger person — she would not have limited herself to using her fists. She argued that a person's hands and body weight can constitute a deadly weapon when they are significantly larger or physically trained, and suggested that football players, specifically trained to inflict physical contact, could represent a legitimate reason to reach for a weapon in self-defense.
"If a 300-pound man is beating me, on top of me and beating me down, I'm not limited to fists," Crockett said.
The narrator's counter is direct: Austin Metcalf was not a 300-pound man. He was not a football player. And according to the evidence presented at trial, he was not on top of Anthony beating him at the time of the stabbing. The scenario Crockett described, the narrator argues, is entirely invented — a fictional version of events constructed to justify a conclusion that the facts of the case cannot support.
The Weapon's Size and the "Skill Issue" Remark
In one of the most condemned moments of her commentary, Crockett discussed the size of the weapon — described as a small multi-tool with scissors and attachments — and suggested its size alone meant it should not have been treated as a deadly weapon. She acknowledged Anthony had a bag with him and questioned whether the jury properly weighed how small the tool was.
The narrator characterizes Crockett's implication plainly: that if Metcalf died from such a small blade, the fault lies with Metcalf for not surviving it. The narrator also highlights an internal contradiction in Crockett's interview — she acknowledged earlier that knives are banned on school property, then said Anthony was not technically at school at the time. The event, however, took place at a school stadium during a school event, making the distinction meaningless.
Race Grifting and Political Survival
The narrator closes with a broader argument about the motivation behind Crockett's commentary. Despite having attended a private prep school costing approximately $30,000 per year, Crockett builds her public identity on racial victimhood — not because she genuinely believes it, the narrator argues, but because it allows her to assign blame and generate support from voters who find the narrative comforting.
The narrator accuses Crockett of keeping victimhood alive as a form of job security: so long as Black communities are told their problems stem from white people, Crockett has a platform to run on. That platform weakened after she lost her Texas Democratic primary, the narrator says, leaving her more desperate for attention than ever — which in this case resulted in her defending a convicted murderer and openly mocking a dead teenager's grieving family.
Video Transcript
[00:00] So, Jasmine Crockett decided to open her
[00:02] mouth and give her unsolicited, low IQ
[00:06] opinion on Carmelo Anthony being found
[00:08] guilty of murdering Austin Metaf. And
[00:11] ladies and gentlemen, I kid you not,
[00:13] this is the most heinous, vile,
[00:16] despicable, heartless, racist, and evil
[00:19] thing I've ever heard come out of
[00:22] Jasmine Crockett's mouth. And that, my
[00:24] friends, is saying something. She
[00:26] ridicules the Metcafe family for
[00:28] grieving their dead son. She mocks
[00:30] Austin Metaf for dying from what she
[00:33] calls just one small stab. She said if
[00:36] she was in Carmelo Anony's shoes, she
[00:39] also would have stabbed Austin Metaf and
[00:42] then blames Carmelo Anony's guilty
[00:44] verdict entirely on white supremacy. As
[00:47] always, like the video and subscribe to
[00:49] the channel. But I want to start with
[00:51] this full uninterrupted interview with
[00:53] Jasmine Crockett because it is so
[00:55] shocking. You have to just see it to
[00:58] believe it.
[00:58] >> Rep. Crockett, you might have seen that
[01:00] Carmemelllo Anthony was sentenced to 35
[01:02] years. I want to get your reaction to
[01:04] the trial and the verdict.
[01:06] >> My heart breaks um
[01:09] for so many reasons. And so, uh, I was
[01:12] just speaking to a student that is
[01:15] shadowing me who wants to be a public
[01:16] defender. And so, it takes me back to
[01:18] what actually made me decide to get into
[01:20] this legislative work in the first place
[01:22] because I know that our systems are
[01:23] broken. And what we saw with that
[01:25] verdict is the evidence of a broken
[01:27] system. Now listen, from everything that
[01:30] I understand, which I wasn't at the
[01:32] trial because obviously I got a day job,
[01:34] but it's my understanding that um Primlo
[01:37] ended up stabbing, puncturing, I don't
[01:41] know what this tool was that they talk
[01:42] about, knife, or some refer to it as a
[01:44] tool. Um he ended up hitting Austin one
[01:48] time and it was about where he hit him.
[01:51] One time, two inches. This wasn't
[01:54] someone who said, "Hey, let me stab you
[01:56] five, six, seven times." And so when
[01:58] you're looking at the punishment range,
[01:59] there's a reason in Texas that it goes
[02:01] from five to 99 or life because you are
[02:04] looking at how intentional, like how bad
[02:07] was this
[02:09] 35 years for a kid who had decided to go
[02:12] out under a tent that was not his team's
[02:14] tent as it was raining
[02:16] >> and simply didn't want to be put out in
[02:18] the rain by some random kid that he
[02:20] didn't know who was larger than him.
[02:22] Listen, a lot of people don't know what
[02:24] it is to live as a black person in this
[02:26] country. But just like you can give the
[02:28] benefit of the doubt to so many police
[02:30] officers when they go out and they shoot
[02:31] some black unarmed person even though
[02:33] they are trained. The fact that there
[02:36] was little to no mercy seen or humanity
[02:39] seen when this black boy said that I was
[02:42] scared or the fact that honestly anybody
[02:45] else who did something with such a small
[02:48] object. All I know is that it wasn't
[02:50] considered unlawful carrying of a weapon
[02:51] because the blade was not long enough
[02:54] >> that they wouldn't even say, "Well,
[02:55] maybe this was more so something that
[02:57] looked like manslaughter."
[02:58] >> Well, some people might say, "Why are
[03:00] you even bringing a knife like that to
[03:02] attract me?" Yeah, people may say that,
[03:05] but walk a day in my shoes and then
[03:07] respond because we as black folks say,
[03:09] "Why is it that people need long armed
[03:11] guns when we are going out and having a
[03:14] first amendment protest?" But people say
[03:17] that's their right. They are allowed to
[03:18] do that. And again, it wasn't against
[03:20] the law for him to have it. It may have
[03:23] been prohibited by school rules, which
[03:25] he wasn't at his school at the time,
[03:27] >> but it definitely was not against the
[03:29] law.
[03:29] >> So, you think race played a role in the
[03:31] verdict? Oh my god. I know Colin County.
[03:35] So, absolutely. Colin County is right
[03:37] north of Dallas County. And um I can
[03:41] tell you that I have had cases that I
[03:43] felt like played out differently because
[03:45] of the counties that they were in. And
[03:47] unfortunately, that was not the county
[03:49] for a black boy.
[03:51] >> So, if this were a white boy in his
[03:53] exact same position, you don't think
[03:55] he'd get a 35 year sentence?
[03:56] >> I would guarantee you it wouldn't have
[03:58] happened. I don't even know if he would
[04:00] have been convicted because if a white
[04:02] boy would have said that they were
[04:03] afraid of a black boy, something tells
[04:05] me that that jury that didn't have any
[04:07] black people on it, they would have
[04:09] believed him in his fear.
[04:11] >> The pitiful victim mentality, the sense
[04:14] of entitlement, the lack of
[04:16] accountability being displayed by
[04:18] Jasmine Crockett is exactly why Carmelo
[04:20] Anthony is in jail and Austin Metaf is
[04:24] dead. At no point did she condemn
[04:26] Carmelo Anthony for fatally stabbing a
[04:28] teenager or even condemn any of his
[04:31] actions leading up to the fatal
[04:33] stabbing. She just put the entire onus
[04:36] on Austin Metaf and white supremacy. She
[04:39] unequivocally defended Carmelo Anony's
[04:41] actions because in her mind he has black
[04:44] skin and therefore can do no wrong. He
[04:47] wanted to sit under the tent so he gets
[04:50] to sit there. He didn't want to leave
[04:52] even after being asked 15 times to do
[04:55] so. So he doesn't have to. He's a poor
[04:58] victim of white supremacy. So he's
[05:00] entitled to everything. And if you
[05:02] prevent him from his universal
[05:05] entitlement, it's tantamount to slavery.
[05:07] And according to Jasmine Crockett, if
[05:10] you politely request that a black person
[05:12] adhere to the social norms of civilized
[05:15] society, you're committing a racism. And
[05:18] if you commit a racism, you are
[05:20] forfeiting your right to life. And the
[05:22] person who kills you can't be held
[05:24] accountable. And she says this like it's
[05:27] some obvious self-evident truth. She
[05:29] believes telling a black person they
[05:31] have to leave somewhere they're not
[05:33] supposed to be is oppression. And
[05:35] oppressed people are justified in using
[05:38] violence to liberate themselves. And
[05:40] that's why despite all the facts of the
[05:42] case and despite Jasmine Crockett being
[05:45] a former attorney, she thinks it was
[05:48] completely reasonable for Carmelo
[05:50] Anthony to murder Austin Metaf in cold
[05:53] blood because her entire philosophy, her
[05:56] entire worldview is white people bad, so
[05:59] bad things deserve to happen to them.
[06:01] But it gets worse. She then goes on a
[06:05] podcast and says Austin Metaf's family
[06:08] doesn't know what pain is because they
[06:10] haven't experienced being black in
[06:12] America.
[06:13] >> Black women, especially black women who
[06:16] have black male children
[06:22] >> live in fear and agony every single day.
[06:27] a fear and agony that I promise you
[06:30] the Met Cavs probably never spent a day
[06:34] living that way
[06:36] >> and we're gonna have to have just some
[06:37] real conversations about race in this
[06:39] country.
[06:40] >> Oh boohoo, the Met Cavs lost their son.
[06:43] That agony is nothing compared to the
[06:45] agony of being black in America every
[06:47] day. She revels in this insufferable
[06:50] victimhood mentality because she thinks
[06:53] it provides her an excuse for her
[06:55] inadequacies and bad behavior. Until
[06:58] you've walked a day in my shoes as a
[07:00] black woman in America, you'll never
[07:02] understand hardship. Even though black
[07:05] people have had every institutional
[07:07] advantage for the last 40 years, they
[07:10] will never relinquish their victimhood
[07:12] identity because if you're a victim,
[07:14] then you deserve preferential treatment.
[07:17] And if you're a victim, then you can't
[07:19] be held accountable for your actions.
[07:21] But here she says Carmelo Anthony
[07:23] stabbing Austin Metaf over a push is
[07:26] totally fine. And if she were in his
[07:28] position, she would have done the same
[07:31] thing.
[07:31] >> If a 300B man is beating me like on top
[07:36] of me and beating me down, I I'm not
[07:39] limited to to fist, you know. I would
[07:43] argue that even the only time we go into
[07:46] things like people's hands being um
[07:48] considered deadly weapons is typically
[07:50] like if they're a professional boxer or
[07:52] that kind of stuff. But I think by the
[07:54] time you start getting to like football
[07:55] player
[07:57] good argument, good freaking argument.
[08:00] We're not talking about like the
[08:02] golfers. We're talking about football
[08:04] players, right? Like this is what they
[08:06] are trained to do is to inflict like
[08:09] serious physical contact. Well, here's
[08:12] the problem, Jasmine. Austin Metaf
[08:14] wasn't a 300B man. He wasn't a football
[08:17] player, and he wasn't on top of Carmelo
[08:20] beating and beating him. That's the
[08:22] thing. These people supporting Carmelo
[08:24] Anthony are so allergic to
[08:26] accountability. They create completely
[08:29] imaginary scenarios and internalize
[08:32] these fictional scenarios as truth and
[08:35] completely disregard the reality of what
[08:38] actually happened just to justify a
[08:40] black person killing a white person. If
[08:43] the prevailing narrative from Jasmine
[08:45] Crockett is black people are allowed to
[08:47] do what they want and if you stop them
[08:49] from doing what they want, they're
[08:51] allowed to kill you and if they kill
[08:53] you, they shouldn't go to jail for it.
[08:55] Don't be surprised when no other race of
[08:58] people want to be around you. If that is
[09:00] apparently the opinion that is
[09:02] ubiquitously held by black people, then
[09:04] expect to see a return to segregation
[09:06] within our lifetime. But here's where
[09:08] she actually says it's Austin Metaf's
[09:11] fault for dying because it was just a
[09:14] small little blade.
[09:17] >> This was it a switch? I don't know what
[09:19] he had.
[09:19] >> It was like a It seemed like it was a
[09:21] multi-tool almost like a Swiss army.
[09:24] Yeah, like with the little scissors and
[09:27] everything and whatever. So, it was
[09:28] small.
[09:31] >> Well, I would have argued the size of it
[09:33] alone, you wouldn't even think it's a
[09:34] daily weapon
[09:35] >> and they forgot he had the bag.
[09:38] >> If if it was one of the little like I I
[09:41] don't know like I I do think
[09:42] >> that's why he went to his coach and was
[09:44] like, "But I don't think I heard him
[09:47] that."
[09:47] >> If Austin died by this little tiny
[09:49] blade, that sounds like a skill issue.
[09:52] she says with her stupid ghetto acrylic
[09:55] nails. Just infinite excuses and
[09:57] endlessly defending somebody who was
[10:00] wrong every step of the way. In the
[10:02] first clip, she acknowledged that knives
[10:04] are banned on school property. And then
[10:07] says, "Well, but he wasn't even at
[10:09] school." Yes, but the stadium is school
[10:12] property and it was a school event. The
[10:14] bottom line is she supports what
[10:16] Carmemelllo Anthony did. And because the
[10:19] facts of the case are indefensible, she
[10:21] has to do Olympic gold medal mental
[10:24] gymnastics and contort herself into a
[10:26] pretzel trying to justify it. Jasmine
[10:29] Crockett adores the victim mentality,
[10:32] not because she believes it. I mean, she
[10:34] went to a $30,000 per year prep school.
[10:36] She loves it because it allows her to
[10:38] attack white people and blame them for
[10:41] everything. And black people love
[10:43] hearing her espouse that sentiment
[10:45] because it provides them a comforting
[10:48] explanation to why their communities are
[10:50] so dangerous and dysfunctional. If all
[10:53] the problems around them are the fault
[10:55] of the white man, that allows Jasmine
[10:57] Crockett to easily get elected running
[11:00] on a platform of hating white people.
[11:02] And because she has no other skills or
[11:05] talent, she desperately relies on black
[11:07] people remaining victims for her own job
[11:10] security. And because she's a race
[11:12] grifting one-trick pony with no
[11:14] substance, that's why she got absolutely
[11:16] humiliated in Texas and couldn't even
[11:19] win her own Democrat primary. And
[11:21] because her political career is over and
[11:24] she'll no longer be relevant to anybody,
[11:26] she's more desperate than ever for
[11:28] attention. And unfortunately, that
[11:30] resulted in her defending a child
[11:32] murderer and making fun of a dead person
[11:34] and their family. But let me know what
[11:36] you guys think down in the comments
[11:37] section below. If you enjoyed the video,
[11:39] make sure you hit that like button. Make
[11:41] sure you subscribe to the channel if you
[11:43] have not already. Turn on those
[11:44] notification bells so you never miss a
[11:47] video.
[11:50] And I will see you guys in the next one.
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