yep. no problem. reporter: and out in suburban sandy, utah, the case still resonates around the shiny new courthouse. where ada josh player struggled with his emotions a bit as he told us he s sure he did not send an innocent man to prison but rather achieved justice for everyone. incht was glad for the family of the victim. reporter: you take this stuff to heart, don t you? i do. i do. reporter: and while they stand on opposite sides of that chasm between innocence and guilt, there s no dispute about the man whose life was lost. ken dolezsar was a man who loved a woman, just as chris loved bianca, who loved hockey, loved helping kids and tried to do right by all that money, which is mostly still around, though
wait for him as long as you have to? yep. no problem. reporter: and out in suburban sandy, utah, the case still resonates around the shiny, new courthouse, where a.d.a. josh player struggled with his emotions a bit, as he says he is sure he did not send an innocent man to prison, but rather, achieved justice for everyone. i was glad for the family of the victim. reporter: you take this stuff to heart, don t you? i do. i do. reporter: and while they stand on opposite sides of that chasm between innocence and guilt, there is no dispute about the man whose life was lost. ken dolezsar was a man who loved a woman, just as chris loved bianca, who loved hockey, loved helping kids and tried to do right by all that money, which
reporter: wait for him as long as you have to? yep. no problem. reporter: and out in suburban sandy, utah, the case still resonates around the shiny new courthouse. where ada josh player struggled with his emotions a bit as he told us he s sure he did not send an innocent man to prison but rather achieved justice for everyone. incht was glad for the family of the victim. reporter: you take this stuff to heart, don t you? i do. i do. reporter: and while they stand on opposite sides of that chasm between innocence and guilt, there s no dispute about the man whose life was lost. ken dolezsar was a man who loved
everything, she said. and he assured her the mistake would soon be rectified. she believed him. i didn t want to be married to a murderer. i would not fool myself if there was a second s doubt in my mind he did not do this. reporter: but some of their friends in the loft weren t so sure. i started to feel sorry for her thinking, oh, my gosh, she poor, naive girl. you re going to be crushed by this. reporter: at the sandy, utah, justice center, the case that police turned over to josh player, the then assistant district attorney, seemed clear. the evidence was exceptionally strong in this case. it all kept pointing in the direction of mr. wright. reporter: there was the surveillance photo, the voice message which was placed from a spot near the loft according to cell tower tracking and the eyewitness. he d been shown a photo lineup with chris in it and now he remembered some details a little differently than he had that first traumatic day. like chris blue eyes in the
christopher s situation. and i will work until my dying day to make sure his name is cleared, you know. reporter: wait for him as long as you have to? yep. no problem. reporter: and out in suburban sandy, utah, the case still resonates around the shiny new courthouse, where a.d.a. josh player struggled with his emotions a bit, as he told us he is sure he did not send an innocent man to prison, but rather, achieved justice for everyone. i was glad for the family of the victim. reporter: you take this stuff to heart, don t you? i do. i do. reporter: and while they stand on opposite sides of that chasm between innocence and guilt, there s no dispute about the man whose life was lost. ken dolezsar was a man who loved a woman, just as chris loved