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When Barry is framed for Clifford DeVoe's "murder" and sentenced to life at Iron Heights without possibility of parole, Warden Wolfe incarcerates Barry in Henry Allen's former cell. After his hidden camera enables him to figure out that Barry is the Flash, Wolfe has Barry transferred to Iron Heights' metahuman wing.
In the Flash Museum, Warden Wolfe and two guards are about to transfer the still-paralyzed Inertia to Iron Heights. Suddenly, a red lightning bolt strikes the villainous speedster and frees him. Again able to move, Inertia quickly kills the guards and runs to the home of Wally West, where he aims to kill the Flash's children.
The Flash (vol. 2) #171 (April 2001) A detective for the Keystone City police and Fred Chyre's partner for the Department of Metahuman Hostility. After a battle with the villain Cicada, Morillo develops an advanced healing factor that renders him nigh-immortal. Gregory Wolfe: The Flash: Iron Heights (August 2001)
Barry then uses his speed to take Ratchet to Jiaju to live out his dream. After capturing Barry on cameras and discovering he is the Flash, Warden Wolfe locks him in his private metahuman wing intending to sell him to Amunet.
Gregory Wolfe is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Gregory Wolfe is the prison warden of Iron Heights Penitentiary and an enemy of the Flash. He can cause muscle spasms, which aids him in keeping inmates in line. [56]
Hazard (Rebecca "Becky" Sharpe) is a fictional character appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. [1] She is the granddaughter of Gambler. Hazard made her live-action debut on the fourth season of The Flash, portrayed by Sugar Lyn Beard.
Infantino originally designed the character for the issue's cover, which became the basis of its plot and the character's history. [ 2 ] Axel Walker debuted in The Flash (vol. 2) #183 (April 2002) and was created by Geoff Johns and Scott Kolins .
Flash of Two Worlds (The Flash #123) was the first crossover in which a Golden Age character met a Silver Age character. Soon, there were crossovers between the entire Justice League and the Justice Society; their respective teams began an annual get-together which endured from the early 1960s until the mid-1980s.