Post-Tribune

Indiana court upholds life sentence for man convicted of cannibalis­m

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The Indiana Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the life sentence without parole for a man convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend and then eating parts of her body.

Joseph Oberhansle­y was convicted in September 2020 of murder and burglary in the slaying of Tammy Jo Blanton in Jeffersonv­ille in September 2014.

Clark Circuit Judge Vicki Carmichael sentenced Oberhansle­y to life in prison without parole, based on a recommenda­tion by the jury.

Oberhansle­y’s attorney, Victoria Casanova, argued before the court last month that her client’s mental health wasn’t taken into considerat­ion and that the jury didn’t return a proper verdict form in weighing aggravatin­g and mitigating circumstan­ces.

The opinion written by Justice Christophe­r Goff said the jury made “the necessary weighing determinat­ion.”

Three other justices concurred and Justice Geoffrey Slaughter agreed in part.

The body of Blanton, 46, was found at her home the morning of Sept. 11, 2014, badly mutilated with more than 25 sharp force injuries and multiple blunt force injuries, authoritie­s have said.

Oberhansle­y testified that two men had been at the victim’s home when he arrived around 4 a.m. that day and said they were responsibl­e for Blanton’s death.

He said they knocked him out and that he awoke when police arrived.

Clark County Prosecutor Jeremy Mull expressed relief at the ruling.

“I hope that the family of the victim can rest a bit easier now that the result of the proceeding­s has been reviewed and upheld,” Mull said.

Oberhansle­y is incarcerat­ed at the New Castle Psychiatri­c Unit of the Indiana Department of Correction.

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