Jurors in the murder trial of the man accused of killing Etan Patz have already seen one man confess on tape to killing the little boy more than 30 years ago, but now, they're also seeing an interview with a man Etan's family has long considered a suspect. NY1's Jose Martinez filed the following report.

One man is on trial for the killing of Etan Patz. In 2012, Pedro Hernandez confessed to strangling the 6-year-old.

Then, there's the convicted child molester who's long been linked to Etan's 1979 disappearance but never charged.

"There's Pedro Hernandez, who makes a statement that the evidence doesn't support. And there's Jose Ramos, who has an extensive pedophile history, who had opportunity and motive with Etan Patz," said Harvey Fishbein, Hernandez's attorney.

Now, defense lawyers say they're bringing Ramos into the "bullseye" of the Patz case.

On Friday, they began playing a 1982 video in which Bronx prosecutor Frank Carroll learned that Ramos had links to the Patz family.

"Jose Ramos lived not too far from the Patzes. But most importantly, he was dating the woman who walked Etan home from school during a school bus strike," said Lisa Cohen, author of 'After Etan: The Missing Child Case that Held America Captive.'

The video shows Ramos being questioned after he tried to lure two boys into a drainage tunnel in the Bronx.

"Until that day, they had never heard of Jose Ramos, and they had no idea that he had a connection to Susan Harrington, who was the babysitter of Etan Patz," Fishbein said.

Asked if he knew Etan, Ramos said the boy sometimes played with Harrington's son.

At one point in the video, he added, "I have no need to do any harm to any child whatsoever." But in 1990, he pleaded guilty to sodomizing a Pennsylvania boy.

Patz's parents later sued Ramos for wrongful death, and in 2004, they were awarded a $2 million default judgment.

Prosecutors contend it's Hernandez who snatched Etan off a SoHo street and strangled him before stuffing him in a box and tossing him out with the trash.

The trial resumes Monday morning, with jurors set to view the rest of the 1982 Ramos interview. Later in the week, they'll also hear from witnesses who say he's made damning statements related to the Etan Patz case.