Hundreds marched across the country in response to the 2015 verdict that found Ontario truck driver Bradley Barton not guilty of first degree murder in the death of Cindy Gladue. In 2011 Gladue’s body was found in a bath tub in a room inside Edmonton’s Yellowhead Inn. The 36-year-old Indigenous mother and sex-trade worker died due to blood loss from an 11 centimeter wound to her vaginal wall. The defence argued the wound was a result of ‘rough’ consensual sex. In 2017 the Alberta Court of Appeal ruled to overturn Barton’s acquittal, ordering a new first degree murder trial. Barton’s retrial was scheduled for 2019 but it has been postponed to the Supreme Court of Canada decision to review how Alberta courts handled the case  that left one Alberta woman dead. Michael Higgins spoke with defence lawyer, Dino Bottos, and Dr. Lise Gotell, chair for the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund and Professor at the University of Alberta.