Marcelle effectively applies Girardian theory to expose how financial incentives and the scapegoat mechanism distort legal reality into a profitable media narrative. It is a sharp critique of a system that sacrifices individual truth for the sake of collective resolution.
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Someone tried to pay me off to defend Kamrelo Anthony, Are others paid? 911 call and Video Released
Added:No offense.
>> Don't Don't reach for anything, all right, man? Stop right there for me.
>> Right there.
>> Dispatch 443, I got these suspects.
And they're currently treating the victim. Again, he's at the north end of the stadium.
>> First call 911, what is the location of the emergency?
>> Hello, we're at TALKING STICK STADIUM.
MY FRIEND JUST GOT >> OKAY, do you know who shot your friend?
>> Um, we have no clue. He's sitting in our tent, but you need to send an ambulance right now.
>> They're on their way, okay. Give me a description of the person that shot him.
>> the bleachers, but you just can't see them into the tent.
As in three people ran underneath the tent to try and provoke Carmelo. That's what they were trying to get me to say.
But you don't see that here. You just see everybody sitting still. So, the court, or maybe the judge, has got tired of all these lies and narratives floating around and decided to release actual footage and a lot of evidence of what happened in the Carmelo Anthony court case. Not only that, someone tried to contact me and pay me off to do a video to spin the narrative. You got that right. Somebody tried to contact me and pay me off to do a video to spin the narrative. So, are other YouTubers being contacted, and if so, did they take the money? I'm going to explain everything. Stay tuned, Fugitive TV.
Welcome to Fugitive TV. I am your host, Rey Marcelle. And what we do here is we take a look at true crime, cases of missing individuals, any sort of crime that might need a deeper look, a different perspective, sometimes on the crime or even life itself. Now, I was once a fugitive on the run from the law myself. I ran for 15 years, lived in different countries, assumed different names, and I ended up turning myself in, accepting accountability. Now, I have this YouTube channel, I own a couple companies, and I am a motivational speaker. Well, I did one video already on Carmelo Anthony, and pretty much everything that happened.
Now, I I I don't remember if I did the video before the verdict or after. That part I don't remember. I have to go back and look. Now, I was planning on doing a video anyway today on because all the a lot of the evidence came out today if you guys didn't know. So, we have the full video of Carmelo Anthony under the tent with Ousmane Camara. We have the police cam footage, and we have the 911 call. So, I was going to do a video on this anyway today. Well, funny thing is, I woke up from uh I should say a message around 8:00 something in the morning.
>> [snorts] >> Um individual contacted me um saying that hey, they're offering me uh money to do a video, but to do it in a certain narrative, okay?
I was being offered $250 to do a YouTube video, okay?
To do a certain narrative on this whole situation, okay? First of all, they said, "Hey, if I can doctor up the video a little bit or try to doctor up the video a little bit or even cut it um and then not show the whole video, but cut some of it.
And you're going to see the video. And I'm going to explain while we're watching the video what they wanted me to do.
And not to pretty much show the full 911 call, but they said that since my background, they figured I would be easier to pay off.
I said, "What do you mean my background?" Well, "You've been to jail.
You went to prison. You were on the run.
You know, so you have a background in the streets." They said, "So, we know you're street smart."
And then they assumed that I would would just take this $250 because of that and be a voice because I myself am a person of color.
So, I would take this money and run with this narrative and not tell the full story of what I know to spin the narrative to try and get my listeners, which is almost 27,000, is not a lot, but it's a lot to some people, right? So, of 27,000 subscribers that I have, to maybe try and get them to follow my narrative. Because if they follow my narrative of what I'm saying, the more people that do this, the more people will be able to back up the narrative of, I guess, that this whole thing of the Metcalfs were racist.
Austin was racist.
He didn't like black folks or black people. Jeff Metcalf didn't like black people or black folks. This is what they were trying to get me to try and paint a picture of, guys.
Listen.
Nobody's paying me off.
Nobody's going to pay me off. I don't care how much money you pay me because I'm not just a voice for black people.
I'm a voice for all people.
I don't care who you are. I'm a voice for right versus wrong, okay? I'm a voice of acknowledgement. I'm a voice of accountability. Because this is what I had to do in order to be sitting here to talk to you guys. I had to acknowledge what I did. I had to accept accountability what I did, whatever punishment came with that, okay? Now, yes, you can fight your case, fight your thing, stuff like that, but I still had to accept it.
Because I learned later on in life, okay?
I got into trouble around my early 20s.
Growing up as a kid, I was a good kid, but then got into trouble in my early 20s, which is all in my book right here, "Rare Redemption". My whole story is in this book. Everything from beginning to the end, when on the run, what got me in trouble, all that, okay? It's done. I'm just waiting on the publishing company to get back to me with a proper deal. If I don't like the deal, then hey, guess what? I'm going to publish it myself.
But, in my early 20s, I got into trouble around 21, 22-ish. I started getting into trouble, okay? Now, at first it was me versus the courtroom. Me versus the judge. The courtroom's the enemy. The judge is the enemies. Your honor, listen, I will walk in there with almost an innocent mentality. Yes, that is something you don't want to do. Then later on I learned I'd walk in there, accept accountability as a grown man. This is what I did. I'm willing to accept accountability for it.
Nobody put a gun to my head and forced me to do this. Nobody threatened my life. Nobody did anything. I have the option as a adult to say yes or no. I'm not going to do it or I am going to do it. And I chose to do it and I'm here as a man to tell you I chose to do it. And yes, I have remorse and I'm sorry for what I did, you know? Please take it easy on me. But, at the same time, I will accept the punishment that you will give me because hey, I accept full accountability, all right?
Did not learn this until I turned myself in. After I was on the run for all those years, guys. And you know what the judge gave me?
You know what the judge gave me?
Two years probation.
Two years probation.
Because while I was on the run, I was actually opening up companies. I was doing a lot of things a productive citizen would do. So, it I showed good It showed good faith.
And I was a lot older.
So, the judge looked at it like, "Hey, you were young man back then. You You know, you you were stupid." And he also said, "Hey, your brain doesn't develop for a man until you're 26 27." I get it.
So, and not only that, I also hired a very great attorney. My attorney was good.
Shout out Mark Rubinstein. I hired a great attorney. But, at the same time, I had to learn that early on. Or, you know, learn that later on in life, I mean, that hey, I got to accept accountability. So, because of that, nobody is going to enter any of my inboxes. Nobody is going to call my phone trying to pay me off to spin a narrative, especially when I don't even feel like that is the proper narrative.
Sorry, it's not going to work. So, for anybody in the future is going to try and do that with Ray Marshawn Fugitive TV, it's not working. Now, let's get back to the case at hand.
Now, when it comes to this trial of Carmelo Anthony, we had a lot of people spin narratives.
A lot of people, okay, came out with lies. Either you believe it or you don't believe it.
And the reason why is because we didn't have access to the court. There was no pictures or anything. So, what we had to do was rely on reporters taking notes.
Some of these reporters, some of these news stations, would come out with notes, and you could tell they would try and spin a little bit of their own narrative. They would say well the witness said this on the stand. But maybe they didn't say the whole thing the witness said. Maybe didn't have have time to write it all down because there's a lot stuff going on. Courts have stenographers and there's a reason why these stenographers are so good at what they do and type so many words per minute because they hey this is what they do. They type out everything but you have to really fast. Your average reporter sometimes writing things down is not going to be able to write everything down as it's going. So they might be missing some things. Some of them might be missing some things on purpose. But if you listen to one new station compared to a other you can care you can tell sometimes there's two different narratives being reported. So because of that we never could get the full truth of what's going on. Oh this witness said this. This witness lied. This witness this. This witness that. Now I'm going to tell you for a fact that I found out.
One of the narratives which at first when I heard this I was like oh is this true?
Is that Austin and his brother were suspended from school and they shouldn't even been at the track meet.
Guys I want to tell you right now that is false.
That is false.
I know for a fact that is false. For you guys that know me you know that I dig deep and I get into information. Okay? And this information this transcript is going to come out in the near future. I promise you that and then you guys can see for yourself instead of trying to search on the internet or just look at Facebook feeds and believe that. They weren't suspended. They were actually in good standings at school. Both of them. I'm not saying they were like the greatest kids. I don't know them. But as in the court records that I saw, they were in good standing.
Now, you know who was suspended from school?
I didn't know if they were still suspended, was Carmelo Anthony.
He was suspended from his high school.
And you know what he was suspended for?
Having a weapon on campus.
A knife.
That is a proven record. That is on the transcript that he was suspended once before.
But, a lot of information news media outlets are not reporting that. They're spinning it the other way around.
Now, this is not saying Carmelo is a bad kid or a good kid. It's not for him, either. But, the information has to be presented, and it has to be presented truthfully. Okay?
This is one of the things they wanted me to tell you was that, or I should say they didn't want me to tell you was that he was suspended once before. Okay? For having a weapon on school grounds. Now, the information I don't know is if he was still suspended.
So, I don't know that.
Now, before we get into the video, all right?
I'm going to show you something.
In my prior video, I told you I believe Carmelo Anthony's parents messed up everything. I believe, and I told you this in a prior video, that they messed it all up.
Carmelo's Anthony's parents messed it up for Carmelo.
And I've been saying from the start, I even said, I don't know if Carmelo should get first degree. I'm just being honest with you guys. I've been saying I don't know if he should get first degree.
But, he needs to do some time. And I said that probably should be a manslaughter charge cuz I don't believe that he woke up in the morning that morning and took this weapon and said, "I'm going to go do this to somebody today." I don't believe he did that.
Now, do I believe he was sitting under the tent and made a dumb decision?
Yes.
You know? And at that time, did he know he was going to do that?
Yes, because testimony says, which I saw, that he said, "Touch me again and see what I do." With his hand in by his bag in the back. So, obviously he knew he was going to do that. So, that's intent right there cuz he knew he was going to do it, right? But I don't think he fully woke up in the morning saying, "I'm going to do this." and planned it out. No, okay?
So, all we said he probably should have got a manslaughter charge.
Hey, you know, some people think he should be free and innocent. That part I don't believe whatsoever. But, Carmelo Anthony when he held that press conference with that minister of the person who's already been accused of c h i l d abuse because he shook somebody's b a b y. You You got to be careful on YouTube and say certain words because they won't share the video. So, bear with me, all right?
Well, soon as I saw that, I was like, "No, what are you guys doing? What are you guys doing putting this guy on stage as a spoke spokesperson?" First of all, first of all, the real victim is the one who passed away.
I don't care what you feel and what you think.
You have to put yourself in the court. The real person victim is the one who passed away.
Okay?
I don't care if he pushed you. I don't care if he told you to leave the tent.
Okay? That does not deserve that he should get stabbed in the heart and things like that. But still, that is the real victim.
So, when you make a press conference and you go on the press conference not only with somebody who's accused of all these harshest things and I'm not talking about Carmelo, I'm talking about the minister of his background and he gets up there and starts making racist statements.
He starts playing that they're the victims. Okay?
This town is not a big town. The town they live in is only a certain amount of people.
So, everybody's going to hear this press conference. Everybody.
And then, the real victim's father shows up and the guy shows up to try and bridge the gap with the Anthonys. The man literally How you guys let me know below. Let me know below how many cases have you guys seen, okay?
Where the alleged person who actually did it their family holds a press conference.
That's one. You don't see that much often.
Two.
The alleged family owns a does a press conference and not only does a press conference, the victim's father or mother shows up at that press conference.
And they don't show up trying to start anything, they show up to bridge the gap. And he shows up to pray with them.
That right there was the downfall.
Carmelo can blame that all on his parents. I'm sorry, but that is true. I don't care what you guys think. Take a look at this.
>> After the father, he did something unthinkable. Reporters, as they always do, shoved a microphone in this grieving father's face and asked him, "How do you feel about this Carmelo Anthony?" Do you know what he said? Jeff Metcalfe said, and I quote, "You know what? I've already forgiven this person. Already."
Now, that is amazing. It's amazing that Jeff would have the strength to do that because I would be incapable of that.
The maturity, the wisdom, the strength, I just would not have it. Now, that baby shaking minister is not going to know this, but when a father makes a statement like that, a statement of forgiveness, the entire Carmelo team has to drop everything. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Your entire legal strategy has to change. I can tell you as an attorney that you call an emergency meeting with all the lawyers, all the family, maybe PR consultants if the family has means for that. Get them on the same page and let them know that this case will revolve around one person, Jeff Metcalfe, the father. So, when Carmelo's mother heard what Jeff said about her son, what do you think that this lady did? She handed the microphone at a press conference to the baby shaking minister of justice.
And at that press conference where Jeff Metcalfe showed up to pray with the family, the baby shaking minister called the police and had Jeff kicked out.
>> Now, that is from the lead attorney. Go follow him. I watch him a lot. Um I watch a lot of attorneys a lot, okay?
So, I watch him a lot and he said this 11 months ago, okay? And he said that press conference got Carmelo Anthony an extra 15 years, which is funny because for M Slaughter, I thought he probably would have got 15 years.
And then he says he got him an extra 15 years. Now it was 30, so we're like five he's like five years off whatever.
>> Many of you were surprised at a point that I made in my last video on how Carmelo Anthony's family has actually costed Carmelo extra years in prison, so many extra years. You wanted me to expound on that further because you had not heard anyone make that point. Well, that's why I'm here. I'm giving you the perspective not of a YouTuber reacting to news, but of an attorney who's practiced for more than 20 years. This is behind the scenes info. So, let's get to it. Now, let me explain on how Carmelo's mother basically sentenced her own son Carmelo to an extra 10 to 30 more years in prison. And what she can do about it now to try to fix it. I explained in my last video that Carmelo's mother apparently hired a family spokesperson, one Dominique Alexander. Uh this Dominique calls himself a minister of justice, whatever that is. Dominique is a convicted felon.
So, he called it 11 months ago. And that is an actual attorney.
And it makes sense because your whole town sees you having this press conference. And where do they get your juries from? Where do they get the people on the jury? They don't go to a different state New York to get the jury. They don't go to California. They get the jury members right there in your own town.
So, you don't think the people in his own town saw the press conference and maybe took offense to that? Like, "Hold on. Wait. Who's the real victim here?
Wait. Y'all claiming this and that? Oh, y'all put racism."
So, y'all don't think for people for the people who are arguing the jury already had their mind made up when he went in there. You know what?
I'm not going to argue that.
I am not going to argue that. Maybe they did have their mind made up. But why?
Why? You don't think that press conference maybe had something to do with it? You don't think maybe some of those people took offense to that?
Like the victim's father shows up and you guys don't welcome him. You guys don't try and bridge that gra- gap. You guys don't beg for hey, please forgive my son.
Cuz all the power relies in Jeff Metcalfe at that moment. Every single ounce of power in that moment relied in Jeff Metcalfe. If you would have got Jet Met Jet Met Jeff Metcalfe on your side at that moment, who knows what Carmelo might be doing right now.
You don't know.
He probably wouldn't have got all the time he got.
If him and if Carmelo and Jeff probably would have met and prayed together, just imagine it, guys. Imagine that.
Imagine that for 1 minute. Put your feelings to the side and imagine if Jeff Metcalfe would have prayed with Carmelo Anthony.
What do you think would have happened when court happened? Do you think Jeff would have said lock him away and throw away the key?
Or hey, he might he needs some time, but I think he has a chance.
I'm just saying.
Now, here is the video, okay?
Of him entering, okay? And then going over to the tent. Now, I'm going to tell you what they were trying to get me to do.
So, here's the video, right?
Now, that's Carmelo.
He's walking. He's highlighted. He's walking over to the tent. All right?
Now, you do see there's different tents here. People are huddled up under the tents. You also see some people on the on the field.
Now, what I find interesting is that the coach testified, Carmelo's coach testified that he should have been on the field warming up at this time.
That he should have been on the field warming up.
Now, if you look, yeah, it's raining, but it's not pouring down rain. If it was pouring down rain, these people would not even be here if it was pouring down rain.
So, he wasn't even supposed to be in there in the first place. He was supposed to be warming up.
Nobody's running to try and dodge the rain, get out the rain, or anything like that. Now, Carmelo was underneath the tent right here in the yellow. Okay?
Everybody's sitting.
You can see right here. Everybody's sitting.
And right above my head, you know, you can look closely, everybody's sitting.
Now, the the narrative was he went under there to dodge the rain, which is could be true.
But once you're done raining, hey, you know, all right, time to go. Now, as like I said, I'm here for the facts.
Now, his coach did say that they didn't bring a tent, their own tent. So, his team didn't have a tent.
Now, I've made this narrative before once before. I played sports growing up, okay?
I played basketball, football, baseball, ran track. And I I made this once up before.
Well, not made it up, I told you guys about this.
Sometimes you'd be on the football field, and you would go to your sidelines, and you would talk, you huddle, whatever, and then some guy from the other opposing team, sometimes they'll venture over to your sidelines, and maybe try and ear hustle of what you guys are talking about for the next play and stuff like that. So, he would try.
And then one of our teammates would see him and be like, "Hey, get out of here."
You know, push him. "Hey, get out of here." You know, football. It's how you know, basketball, you don't see it so much, but football, yeah. So, you would get that, "Yeah, get out of here." Now, Austin Metcalfe, no excuses, but remember, they were football stars.
They were football stars. So, that's something in football that you're just used to, especially competitiveness.
You're like, "Hey, you know, you got to go. Get up out of here." or whatever, right?
Now, people are still walking like normal. Like I said, you could tell it's not raining heavy because nobody's running.
Nobody's trying to take shelter really quick.
So, let me rewind this a little bit. Let me rewind this. Now, you see underneath the tent, one person who is sitting down.
Looks like he jumps down two stairs.
Now, I will tell you that the person who tried to pay me didn't want me to show the whole footage. They want me to cut it and then tell you that three members were running from the bleachers, but you just can't see them into the tent.
As in, three people ran underneath the tent to try and provoke Carmelo. That's what they were trying to get me to say.
But, you don't see that here. You just see everybody sitting still.
>> Now, as we look, you can tell there were, you know, some narratives of him getting jumped. Now, none of us was there.
This footage is grainy. We can't really see exactly what's going on because the problem is camera's so far back. You can't You can't I even tried putting this into AI to see if it can clear it up. It really can't because of the pixels. If the pixels are not that If it If it's shot only in a certain amount of pixels, there's only so much you can do with this footage, okay? So, we can't see a lot underneath the tint.
We can't. But, the one thing I can see is I don't see a big commotion going on.
Usually, if somebody is getting jumped, you would get a little circle of people backing up, looking at the jumping going on.
Now, in the back, you do see right here, rewind a little bit.
You can kind of see in the back.
You see like a push or a shove.
Push, shove.
And now, Carmelo runs out.
Now, people are scattering.
Now, people are scattering.
They wanted me to stop the video right there and say he ran into somebody's arms.
That's what they wanted me to do.
>> But that's not what happened. As you see, he kept running.
All right, so you see him right here.
He's got his hands up. He's got his hands up because a cop the cop approaches him. Okay?
I didn't see him running to anybody's coaches arms yet.
That I did not see. The whole narrative was that he ran into a coaches arms, okay?
And was saying, "I'm sorry."
And all kind of things like that. That was the whole narrative if you guys remember. He ran into a coaches arms and said, "I'm sorry." Now, this is the narrative that was brought out to us.
None of that's here. None of that is here.
Instead, he's running from people. You see people behind him pointing.
Then a cop catches up to him.
Right here, he's got his hands up because there's a cop right there about to pat him down.
Okay? Which we are going to look at the other angle of this.
Now, only coach that's there the coach is on the other side of the fence.
But he's on the other side walking with him. Meaning he the coach is in the inside of the track. Carmelo's on the walkway.
You guys been to a track meet it's divided.
Now, here is the actual body cam footage.
>> No offense.
>> Don't reach for anything, all right, man? Stop right there for me.
>> Right there.
>> Dispatch 443, I got these and they're currently treating the victim. Again, he's on the north end of the stadium.
All right.
>> Now >> You have something like that?
>> That right there is his coat on the other side of the fence.
Right there.
>> [snorts] >> 44 copy, I'll be in route.
All right, thanks.
>> Can you all back up a little bit? Come over here for me.
>> This is when he was walking with his hands.
>> [snorts] >> Dispatch 443, everybody can slow down.
I got the alleged suspect in in handcuffs right now, detained.
>> 443, everyone else can slow down.
Suspect detained in handcuffs.
>> If you can open up the channel and medics are clear to come in.
Have them come to the north east entrance.
That's the main gate, that's wide open there.
And then you come to the victim from there.
This is the alleged suspect.
>> Dispatch is 442.
>> Okay.
So nothing on your person at all?
Nothing?
Mind if I reach in your pockets and stuff and all that?
Stabbing? Okay.
Little personal there, okay? Just to make sure.
Okay.
The the su- the victim's going to be underneath that tent over there, so I'll I'll get medics.
>> I think he was analyzing >> Memorial tent over there guys. All right.
What's happening right now?
Victim is over there on the north end.
They got staff tending to him right now.
This is the alleged suspect. All right.
No, no. We searched him and he's got nothing.
>> I don't know what happened.
>> Up to you. Up to you.
>> That's fine, dude. This is closer.
>> Okay. Let me do one more little check of you, okay? You don't have a firearm reaching your pockets or anything like that, you're good?
What's your name, man?
>> Carmelo Anthony. K A R M E >> Have a seat here real quick, man.
Watch your head.
Let me check your your hood here, buddy, okay?
>> Yes, sir.
>> What say you What say you what? Lean this way so you're not resting on your hands, okay?
>> Yes.
>> All right, see a little bit of blood on your hands there, okay?
>> Yes.
>> All right.
So, your first name is Carmelo?
>> Yes.
K A R M E O >> Let's see here, hold on a >> You sit down, you'll be okay.
>> [snorts] >> I don't know yet, man. Carmelo, C A R A >> K A R >> K A R >> M E L O >> M E L O, Carmelo. What's your last name?
>> Anthony.
>> A N T H >> O N Y >> O N Y. Where do you go to school?
>> I'm in 12th grade.
>> 10th grade? You go to Emerson?
>> No, sir.
>> Where do you go? Santana? Okay.
>> I'm in 12th grade. 12th grade.
>> 12th grade? Okay. North Santana.
All right, sit tight for me real quick, buddy, all right?
>> And as you see, you can see the raindrops coming down.
But once again, it's not raining that heavy to where people are trying to run for cover.
Let me rewind this real quick.
Because there was a narrative that Carmelo Anthony wasn't even that big of a guy.
I don't know if you guys remember that.
So, I don't know how big these police officers are.
But looks like an average size, average built.
Doesn't look too He doesn't look small like people were trying to say. A better clear footage right there.
Yeah, so he doesn't look like he's a tiny kid.
Looks like he's just average built, average size.
Like the rest of the kids walking by.
>> Dispatch 911, what is the location of the emergency?
>> I'm right outside OF THE STADIUM. MY FRIEND JUST GOT >> OKAY, do you know who >> Stabbing!
Um, we have no clue who's stabbing our kid, but you need to send an ambulance right now.
>> They're on the way, okay. Give me a description of the person that stabbed him.
>> He was wearing a gray Essentials hoodie.
Uh, he was black. He's standing out in the street right now.
>> Did he stab your friend >> Yes.
>> Okay.
>> He's wearing blue sweatpants on.
And dark.
>> Okay, and what did he stab your friend with?
>> I I don't know. My friend's bleeding everywhere.
>> Okay.
Where was he stabbed at?
>> Uh, the chest.
>> Okay.
And do you still see the person that stabbed him, or did he leave?
>> It was Austin. Austin was stabbing his chest.
>> Okay, what did you say? The person that stabbed him, is he still there? Do you still see him?
>> Um, there's a ball thrown in my face.
Uh, yeah.
>> There's [clears throat] a ball thrown at your friend and he's in there.
>> Sorry, what?
>> The person that stabbed your friend, is he still there?
>> Yeah, he's still here.
>> Okay. And are there There's a coach with him?
>> Yes, he's he's with He's with him now.
>> Okay.
Do you know if they if he still has the weapon on him?
>> Um, no clue, but he's like like he can't do anything. He's like he's done.
>> What What do you mean? What's he >> He He fell off the bleachers.
in the chair. What?
>> What do you mean he can't do anything?
What's going on with him?
>> Like I mean like coaches have him. He can't hurt anyone.
>> Okay, when you say they have him, are they physically holding him down?
>> Uh, no, like they're just holding him walking around.
>> Okay.
>> Okay.
>> Okay. What's your name?
What's your last name?
What's your last name?
Okay.
And do you see any of the responders there yet?
>> Um, we hear the sirens, but we >> Okay.
>> Just the coaches sent us out. We're all going into our buses.
>> Okay. So, you're going to get on a bus right now?
>> Yes, ma'am.
>> Okay.
And the the rest of the students are walking towards the buses?
>> Yeah, everyone's getting evacuated out the stadium.
>> Okay.
>> Thank you so much for being quick.
>> Okay.
Just follow whatever directions you're being provided by either the officers or be your coaches, okay?
>> Yes, ma'am.
>> Okay. I'm going to go ahead and disconnect with you, Nathan, but we've got all kinds of help headed that way.
>> All right. Thank you.
>> Thank you. Bye-bye.
>> Bye.
>> Now, one person has came out and said that they were no longer supporting the Anthony family because they raised a million dollars for them and the family seemed like they were just being greedy and wanted more money, you know, with things of that nature.
Now, I don't know if this is true or not, but this is what some things are saying. Now, we all know the GoFundMe.
It wasn't a GoFundMe. It was a different account cuz you can't do GoFundMe for what they did. So, it was a different type of thing that they raised money for. Um they got over $600,000.
Now, the narrative side from people who are from the family started saying that they never got the money, that it was frozen, they never gave it to them. But, there was a statement from that company saying that they actually did get the money. So, here is GiveSendGo was the crowdfund. It's like GoFundMe.
Um pretty much similar. Now, this is where the fundraiser was uh for them.
Now, they actually made a statement because they got tired of the narrative saying that you know, that they froze the money because that's what some people are believing. They froze the money.
It says, a jury has found Carmelo Anthony guilty in the death of Austin Metcalfe. Our hearts are with Austin's family, his twin brother, and everyone grieving a loss that no verdict can undo.
GiveSendGo hosted a fundraiser connected to this case. Hosting a fundraiser has never been an endorsement of a person, their actions, their legal arguments, or their public statements. It is not a declaration of innocence and is not a political statement. GiveSendGo provides access to lawful fundraising, which we extend across the full spectrum of cases. This fundraiser was created to support pre-trial needs and those funds were distributed, see, distributed over the past year for lawful purposes including legal defense and family relocation.
With that stated purpose now complete, the fundraiser has been closed and the funds will be paid out. Our policy is that a fundraiser's stated purpose stays accurate to givers allow us know that they are supporting. Our prayers for Ahmaud Arbery's family, for all those affected and for justice, mercy, peace in our community, okay? So, as you see right there, they are saying that they distributed the money. So, like I said, there was people out there saying that they never got the money, but they distributed it. Now, we don't know what all that money went to, we really don't know. And it did say for family relocation. It did say that on the statement. So, for people who are saying, "Hey, they used the money for the being in this big house and things like Well, technically, it did say for family relocation. Now, depending on if they want to get some small shack or a big mansion, there's nothing we can say about that, all right? Because that was in the description. And they did that uh the relocation because they felt that they were being threatened and and things like that. But, a lot of this I think falls back on that press conference. If that press conference would have never happened, I think a lot of these threats and a lot of this white versus black that went on with this case probably would not have happened. Now, did the big media play a role in this? Yes, they did. The big media did help with this and play a role. And because of that, I believe the parents fell right into the trap of what the big media wanted everybody to do because now the big media has something to talk about including myself on this channel, all right? Which I wish we didn't have to talk about this stuff.
But, unfortunately, this stuff played a role, and we do Somebody contacted me to do this, and I'm not going to do it, so I'm going to let you guys know. And for any other YouTubers or influencers who have been contacted, you know, um I'm not going to name any names yet.
I'm not going to put them out there yet, just yet. But, if I continue to see something like that, then yes, that person might get exposed, and I might tell you who they are, all right? But, for now, please, stop it. All right?
I don't need your 250 to sit on my YouTube channel and tell a lie. That's one thing I'm not going to do.
Now, do I think Carmelo's lawyer did a great job? No, hell no.
This guy sucked. I don't know where they got Carmelo's lawyer from the first place. I don't know what they were doing with this guy, but this guy was horrible. He even made one statement inside the courtroom to the jury that Austin fell on the knife. Come on now.
Oh, he just fell on a knife. Come on.
Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. Stop it. All right?
Yes, I felt Carmelo should have take the stand. What they should have did was humanize Carmelo. Humanize him. Okay?
Not play him as the victim, but humanize him as he is a young kid that was 17 years old at the time with these emotions, testosterone, whatever it is going through his body, and then had a professional child psychiatrist get on the stand and also tell the jury, because you might know about this, but a lot of people don't. Tell the jury, "Hey, 17-year-old boy, they are making decisive decisions, things like that.
So, please look at him as a 17-year-old boy. Let's not look at him as a m u r d e r. Let's look at him as a 17-year-old boy at that time. Even though he's being tried as an adult, but we got to remember this happened when he was 17 and he's 19 now. He's still truly in his brain not an adult.
My own judge told me that, "Hey, hey, it makes sense of why you made your life change around 27, 28 years old because that's when, you know, a male, I guess, fully matures or, you know, so they should have had a professional get on and say these things, all right? But, they didn't. They didn't.
People were throwing a narrative that, "Hey, witnesses got on the stand and lied." Things like that. Well, looking at this video, there are some things that you can say they did tell the truth.
Okay? Now, like I said, you really can't see a lot, but I didn't see anybody getting jumped. I also didn't see somebody running down three flights of stairs to go push him, either. I didn't see that, as well. Look like some people were already in the tent.
That's what it looked like, all right?
You can only go off of what we're seeing, but we weren't there.
So, I don't know if these witnesses were lying. I don't know, but all I do know, let's say if the witnesses are lying, the attorney should have did something about that. The attorney probably should have fought harder. The attorney should have humanized him. The attorney should have put him on the stand. Some people will say, "Well, the prosecution would have ate him up." For what? If he would have got on the stand and told the truth. "Hey, um my life was in danger. I'm sorry. I didn't mean to do this." Such and such.
Then we all would have got to question in the first place. Why did you bring the knife to attract me?
But, the reason why he wasn't put on the stand because the prosecution would have said, "Hey, Carmelo, it's true you got suspended already from school for having this knife."
What do you think he would have said?
Yes.
The jury would be like, "Oh, he's known for carrying a knife." It was not against the law to carry a knife, but you not supposed to have it at school.
So, the whole question goes to why does he feel he have to carry a knife in the first place? Something's going on. See, everybody looks at the surface level.
Oh, he did this. But, why does he feel at the age of 17 you need a knife on school grounds, school sporting Why? What's going on?
See, nobody wants to admit this. Nobody wants to look at that. Why does he feel he needs this? What's going on in his life to the root of the issue where he feels that he needs this?
This question people do not want to answer. Why?
This is the root of the evil, guys. This is the root of the problem.
Right there. Why do you feel that?
Hey.
I'm just posing a question. And I'm posing a question that the prosecution would have asked Carmelo as well, which we all would have had an answer to if they would have put him on the stand, but they didn't. So, now people in the uproar because of Hey.
of what he got. When they should have humanized him, if you want to take your anger out on anybody, take it out on two people. The parents when they did that press conference, second the attorney.
I'm just calling it like how I see it, no filter added. That's who you should take your anger out on. All right? Like I said in the beginning, I don't think he was innocent, but when it comes to first degree, I don't think he should have got that either. Should have been somewhere in the middle. Let me know what you think below of what he probably should have got.
Now, there's something I want to share with you guys, okay?
Um this is from René Girard.
Um he is a philosopher, all right?
Now, one thing he does say, what he said, he defined scapegoat scapegoat mechanism, all right?
He defined it as a society's method for resolving internal conflict by redirecting a community's mounting tensions and mimic violence onto a single innocent outsider. The group restores peace and unity through the shared act of expulsion or sacrifice, meaning that people a lot of times have to find a an escape goat, okay?
To burden or to solve their feelings or what's going on, all right?
If they can blame this or blame somebody or sacrifice somebody, it makes things or the situation better for that individual or those people, okay? Now, Girard argued that humans do not desire things independently. Instead, we learn what to desire by intimidating the desires of others. When multiple people desire the exact same thing, often limited object, this imitation naturally breeds rivalry um and conflict.
Okay? So, when you see somebody that is desires the same thing, you're one of you're you're going to want to desire naturally as a human what they desire.
And if somebody over here is desiring something different, it is going to breed a conflict, okay?
Now, it also says as the conflict escalates, people mimic each other's aggression. This leads to war of all against all that threatens to destroy the community entirely.
To save themselves from destruction, the community unconsciously unites against an outsider or vulnerable member who cannot easily defend themselves by projecting all communities guilt, rage, disorder into this single target. The group purges itself of tension to restores order.
Societies were built directly directly on this foundation. The scapegoat victim, once eliminated, is often transformed into a mythical figure or a daily or a deity that the society begins to venerate for bringing peace.
I hope reading that you can understand what I just read and you can put that into your daily life and start realizing certain things.
Sometimes people will start arguing.
Sometimes people will have conflict and they have to sacrifice somebody.
Somebody has to get sacrificed. Somebody has to become the scapegoat for these group of individuals to feel they did a better job.
Please let me know below. What do you think of all this? And do you think other people, influencers, not just YouTubers, anybody, social media, TikTok has been approached to get paid to spin a certain narrative. And it also makes me wonder are there other stories out there that people have done this to to spin a certain narrative? If you heard of any of this, please let me know below. All right?
Let me know. There's no judgement here.
You can comment whatever you want on the bottom of my channel. Like I said, no judgement. We're humans, not everybody is going to agree and that's just the way we are. But please take care of one another. Until next time, look out at your surroundings, watch your surroundings. This is Fugitive TV and I'm out.
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