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Cindy Gladue's mother Donna  McLeod, second left, comforts Gladue's daughters Brandy, 15, and Cheyanne, 13, right as protestors gather to demonstrate against the acquittal of Bradley Barton in Edmonton on April 2, 2015.The Globe and Mail

Blood was splattered nearly everywhere in the bathroom of an Edmonton hotel room, when police found the lifeless body of Cindy Gladue in a bathtub a decade ago.

Edmonton police Constable Meghan Hawrish described for a jury Monday the graphic scene in Room 139 of the Yellowhead Inn.

Ontario truck driver Bradley David Barton, 52, is accused of killing Ms. Gladue, a 36-year-old Métis and Cree woman, after a night of drinking.

Wearing a grey T-shirt and pants, Mr. Barton stood tall in court on the first day of the trial and pleaded not guilty to manslaughter.

Constable Hawrish was the first witness to take the stand and described where Ms. Gladue was found on the morning of June 22, 2011.

The officer pointed to photos she took of drops of blood on the hotel bed and a pillow. There was significantly more blood on the bathroom floor, the sink faucet, all over the bathroom walls, on towels, in the soap holder, on the bathroom door’s frame and in the tub with Ms. Gladue’s body.

Next to the bed there was also a bundled up comforter with more blood stains, Constable Hawrish testified.

“There was a lot of blood,” testified Detective Nancy Ho, with the crime scenes investigations unit, who responded to the call with Constable Hawrish.

Ms. Gladue’s mother, Donna McLeod, sat in the gallery at Edmonton Court of Queen’s Bench as a judge warned that evidence during the trial will be graphic and unsettling.

Crown prosecutor Julie Snowdon said in her opening statement that an autopsy found Ms. Gladue died from blood loss owing to a catastrophic and unusual wound in her vagina wall.

“Her vagina was torn all the way through,” Ms. Snowdon told the jury.

“The fatal wound spanned 11 centimetres,” she said. “It perforated the entire thickness of her vaginal wall.”

Ms. Snowdon added that after calling police, Mr. Barton gave different versions of his interactions with Ms. Gladue to officers and a colleague.

Mr. Barton, who was working at the time as a long-distance furniture mover, said he and Ms. Gladue had been drinking together the night before, Ms. Snowdon said. Security footage showed the two going to Mr. Barton’s room.

The next morning, at about 7:40 a.m., footage showed Mr. Barton checking out of the hotel and meeting a colleague in the parking lot, the prosecutor said.

She said Mr. Barton told the colleague that a woman had knocked on his room door the night before and asked to take a shower. The next morning, Mr. Barton told the colleague, he woke up and found her unresponsive and naked in the tub.

The colleague told Mr. Barton to call police, so he went back to the room and did so, Ms. Snowdon said.

She added that when police arrived, Mr. Barton told a longer story to investigators about how he met Ms. Gladue. He said the woman arrived at his door and she offered herself to him sexually, but he declined.

Ms. Snowden said that during the trial, evidence about Mr. Barton’s internet search history will be presented to show that nine days before Ms. Gladue’s death, he did a Google search of “vaginas getting ripped or torn by large objects.”

Mr. Barton’s trial, set for about seven weeks, is to resume Tuesday afternoon.

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