and as michael wolfe cooled his very sober heels in an ohio jail, he protested his innocence to anybody who would listen. including the local police to whom wolfe sent a letter in which he claimed all he knew of the crime centered on a conversation with his ex-wife barbara's father, harry, a few months before the murder. reporter stefan kamph writes for "the broward-palm beach new times" and read michael's letter. all michael would admit to is meeting harry in a park near the walmart overlooking the place where david's bones would later come out of the ground. >> michael wolfe said that he had basically pointed over to that plot of land and said, "well, if you needed to bury a body, that would be a good place to do it." and then he concluded this letter with, "and i don't know if he had listened or not." >> reporter: apparently, he did. >> if michael wolfe had really not known anything beyond that point, it would get him off the hook, and it would leave it all in the hands of harry britton. >> reporter: so michael was pinning the murder on no one but harry, who was safely dead and could tell no tales. but now detective velasquez believed she had enough evidence to bring michael wolfe back to florida to stand trial for the murder of david jackson. >> we did the arrest warrant