4th Cir.

United States v. Blankenship

July 13, 2026 ·25-4336 ·Per Curiam · By James Taylor

The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed the criminal conviction and sentence of Terry Leon Blankenship. The court found no reversible error in the district court's evidentiary rulings, sufficiency of evidence determination, or sentencing decision.

Listen to this decision 0:00 / 1:11

Background

Terry Leon Blankenship was convicted by a jury in the Southern District of West Virginia of three offenses: attempting to obstruct enforcement of federal sex trafficking laws, attempting to corruptly persuade a witness to prevent testimony, and conspiring to commit these offenses. The district court imposed a one hundred forty-four month prison sentence followed by a term of supervised release for life.

The court’s reasoning

The court reviewed evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion, the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal de novo, and sentencing decisions for unreasonableness. After assessing the record and appellate submissions, the court discerned no reversible error and concluded the district judge properly analyzed and disposed of all contentions on sound legal bases.

What it means going forward

The conviction and sentence stand, reinforcing the district court’s discretion in handling obstruction of justice cases and sentencing variances.