The the Flash.

Within the pages of The Flash Annual #3, we are thrown midway into a police station, where Captain Boomerang is being questioned. By his telling, the Suicide Squad had escaped the clutches of the Blue Beetle --- Ted Kord --- who had been utilizing the Squad for his own nefarious purposes. The Squad, by this time, has a few new additions, as well as of the Revolutionaries, among its ranks. Having escaped, and in need of resting up, the Squad is hiding out in one of the abandoned hideouts of the Rogues. Halfway through taking stock of themselves, none other than the Flash appears...halfway through a meal and clearly having left in a rush.

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One of the newer, younger of the Suicide Squad, Wink, immediately recognizes the Scarlet Speedster, and is absolutely ecstatic that she gets to meet the superhero. A meta-human with the power to teleport, Wink is a punk, non-binary member of the Squad, and has some choice issues with authority.  Her iration of the Flash stems from her belief that he doesn't play by the rules: whereas other of the Justice League are content with beating up and locking up their enemies, the Flash has shown himself to continually try to help or rehabilitate them, or outright team up with them against a larger threat. To someone like Wink, the Flash isn't part of the established authority. While Wink is convinced of the Flash's anti-authoritarianism, other of the Suicide Squad aren't as easily convinced.

Suicide Squad Fans of The Flash Comic

However, Captain Boomerang does hold a begrudging respect for the Flash as well. Having had a change of heart with the Squad (due to the time during which Captain Cold was a member) the Flash agrees to help the Squad continue their getaway. Helping them speed away to the location of a top-secret plane, the Flash and the Squad then team up against Deathstroke, who had arrived to put an end to the anti-hero team. By teaming up, the Flash and the Squad defeat Deathstroke, but not without Captain Boomerang being arrested.

Even following the Squad's escape, the Flash helps break Captain Boomerang out of jail, figuring the villain's had enough of a troubled life to begin with. For a character like Wink, the Flash is just the type of hero she wouldn't mind butting heads with: empathetic, and not prone to breaking the rule to help others (even his own enemies). As a character who no doubt has had her own instances of being misunderstood or mistreated by others, to see someone like the Flash take a stand for misfits, and even teaming up with them to defeat a common threat, has to be inspiring. Once the day comes she discovers the Flash is a detective in civilian life, Wink might have a change of heart, but until then, she could do much worse than to ire the Fastest Man Alive.

Next: Why The Flash Movie Doesn't Need A Villain Anymore