!['There was money and blood.' Halifax murder trial hears grim details of crime scene](https://www.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/ctvnews/en/images/2017/6/6/william-sandeson-1-3445803-1675100098124.jpg)
'There was money and blood.' Halifax murder trial hears grim details of crime scene
CTV
The grisly aftermath of an alleged fatal shooting was described Monday during the murder trial of a former Dalhousie University medical student accused of killing a fellow student in Halifax seven years ago.
The grisly aftermath of an alleged fatal shooting was described Monday during the murder trial of a former Dalhousie University medical student accused of killing a fellow student in Halifax seven years ago.
William Sandeson, who at the time was 23 years old and a track athlete at the university, has pleaded not guilty to the first-degree murder of Taylor Samson, a student in the physics department.
The Crown alleges Samson, 22, had gone to Sandeson's apartment to sell him nine kilograms of marijuana when the accused shot him on the night of Aug. 15, 2015. Samson's body has yet to be found. The Crown believes his remains were carried away in the huge bag that contained the drugs.
Key witness Justin Blades -- another former Dalhousie student and track athlete who knew Sandeson -- testified Monday that he was visiting a neighbouring apartment rented by his best friend, Pookiel McCabe, when both men heard a loud bang.
Within seconds, Sandeson knocked at their door and was allowed in, and the three men headed for Sandeson's apartment across the hall to see what was going on, Blades told the jury.
He said that from the doorway of the apartment, he saw a tall man slumped forward in a kitchen chair, his head almost between his knees -- and there was blood pouring from wounds he could not see.
"It was a slow stream of blood," the 31-year-old witness said in a shaky voice. "He was bleeding out."