‘Legacy horrific’ but Ontario trucker’s retrial more sensitive to victim: lawyers
EDMONTON — Lawyers say the retrial of a man to be sentenced next week for killing a woman in his hotel room 10 years ago is an example of how cases involving missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls should be handled.
They say Bradley Barton’s second trial was an improvement over the first, because instructions to jurors included reminders of the traumatic effects of colonialism and encouraged them not to judge the woman’s heritage and lifestyle.
Barton, a truck driver from Mississauga, Ont., was convicted in February of manslaughter in the death of Cindy Gladue, a 36-year-old Métis and Cree woman. A jury had found him not guilty of first-degree murder in 2015. Both the Alberta Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court ordered a new trial.
His original acquittal sparked rallies and calls for justice for Indigenous women.