The estranged husband of missing Connecticut mom Jennifer Dulos allegedly left a trail of items stained with her blood in roadside trash cans — after she was beaten in her own garage, court documents revealed Monday.

The day Jennifer vanished, Fotis Dulos and his girlfriend are believed to have stopped at more than 30 locations outside Hartford to dispose of items including clothing and a bloodied kitchen sponge, according to their arrest warrants.

The details emerged as Fotis, 51, and gal pal Michelle Troconis, 44, were arraigned Monday on charges of evidence-tampering and hindering prosecution in the case.

In an already-made-for-TV saga, Jennifer, a 50-year-old mom of five from a wealthy family, was embroiled in a nasty divorce with her Greek immigrant hubby when pals reported her missing around 7 p.m. Friday, May 24.

Jennifer — who once claimed in court papers that she was afraid her developer husband might kill her — was last seen dropping their kids off at school that morning.

The next day, cops found “multiple stains” on the floor and a car inside the garage at Jennifer’s New Canaan home that “tested positive for human blood,” court documents show.

There were “multiple areas of blood splatter’’ — and “evidence of attempts to clean the crime scene,’’ the papers say.

“Investigators came to the consensus that a serious physical assault had occurred at the scene, and Jennifer Dulos was the suspected victim,’’ the court affidavit says.

Around the same time that Jennifer was reported missing, records from Fotis’s iPhone X, Troconis’s cell phone and area surveillance footage indicate that he and his girlfriend were tooling around Albany Avenue near their mansion in Farmington — some 70 miles away from New Canaan, the documents state.

The pair is believed to have driven about 4 miles along the roadway, between Baltimore and Edward streets, stopping “at over 30 locations,” the papers say.

A man matching Fotis’ description, in a truck like the one he owns, was seen leaving the vehicle during stops “and placing multiple garbage bags into various trash receptacles,’’ the documents say.

Clothing and “household goods’’ including a kitchen sponge were later recovered from the trash cans — and tests showed they had Dulos’s blood on them, the documents say.



At the corner of Albany Avenue and Garden Street, the man also was seen “inserting an item into a storm drain gate,’’ according to the papers.

Investigators later fished a FedEx mailing box from the drain that contained two Connecticut license plates that had been altered with tape, the papers say.

The expired plates had been changed from “516WDJ” to “5T6WBU” — and were from a 2007 Chevy Suburban that had belonged to Fotis, authorities said.

Meanwhile, the pickup truck’s passenger, believed to be Troconis, would lean out of the vehicle as it drove along Albany Avenue “either placing something on the ground or picking up an item,’’ the papers state.

“Based on the above described facts and circumstances,’’ the charges were brought against the pair, the documents say.

Jennifer’s cell phone has yet to be found. A team of FBI and local authorities were searching Waveny Park near her home Monday with a dog specially trained in sniffing out electronics, a police official told The Post.

The missing woman’s black Chevy Suburban was found abandoned in the park after her disappearance.

Dora, a yellow Labrador Retriever, was leading her handler, a detective with the Connecticut State Police Computer Crimes Unit, through a wooded section of the park “looking for anything that is capable of holding electronic data,’’ said unit Detective David Aresco.

A large truck from the Connecticut State Police’s Major Crime Squad also spent Monday at the mansion shared by Fotis and Troconis, which is now considered an “active crime scene,” police said.

The developments came as prosecutors warned to expect more charges to be filed in the case, which is being treated as a homicide.

Fotis and Troconis appeared at separate hearings in Norwalk Superior Court and were ordered held on $500,000 bond. Neither spoke during their proceedings.

The high-end real-estate developer looked stunned and wide-eyed, shackled and dressed in an ill-fitting orange jumpsuit.

Troconis appeared in a blue and white striped shirt, black pants and sneakers and, looking around the courtroom for friendly faces, blew an air-kiss to relatives, including her parents.

Andrew Bowman, a lawyer repping the international marketing executive, argued for reduced bail, saying, “She doesn’t pose a risk to the community.’’

Fotis’s lawyer, Eugene Riccio, noted his client’s Ivy League education in pressing for the same.

But prosecutors responded that the raps are likely just be the tip of the iceberg, and the judge ultimately refused to budge on the bail.

While Fotis remained cooling his heels behind bars Monday evening, Troconis was sprung by the afternoon, shielding her face with a light-blue shirt as she was escorted by a court marshal to her lawyer’s waiting black sedan through a throng of reporters shouting, “Where’s Jennifer’s body?”

As a condition of bail, she wore a GPS monitoring device on her left foot, above her sneakers missing their laces.

Both suspects had to surrender their passports. Troconis is a native Venezuelan.

The couple was arrested late Saturday at a Residence Inn about 2 miles from their home, after an interstate search of family properties and DNA samples taken from Fotis.

Neither suspect is cooperating with the investigation, authorities said.

Jennifer, who filed for divorce from her husband in 2017, had accused him in court papers of cheating on her, and he allegedly owed her mother hundreds of thousands of dollars from a business-venture-gone-south.

The once-golden couple were battling it out over their finances — with her arguing for more support and him crying poor — and custody of their children, ages 8 to 13, including two sets of twins.

When Fotis tried to visit his kids at her mother’s Upper East Side home last week, he was rebuffed by a private security team hired by her.

On Monday, Jennifer’s mom, Gloria Farber, left her apartment using a walker and got into a Chevy Suburban with two younger women, but declined comment.

Bowman and Riccio also both declined to talk after court.

Additional reporting by Kevin Sheehan and Olivia Bensimon