A man desired with regard to the discovery of a body that is wrapped in a plastic sailing pauline magazine and was dumped in a paddock last week.
James French, 24, avoided the police since they were alleged John Birch, 39, discovered in a property in Glenorie, Northwest Sydney, on March 14.
Frans was last seen on a fence on the old Northern Road on the same day and has since been searched for interrogation.
The police established crimes on the paddock and in a nearby house on the day of the discovery.
Around 2 p.m. on Sunday, tactical officers arrested French as he slept in a car in a house in Glenorie.
Birch was missing by family the night before his body was found.
A family member then sent the police on March 14 to the location of the body of the Nepean.
“He was transferred to Castle Hill's police station, where questions are going on,” said a police spokeswoman.

John Birch's body, 39, was half buried in a northwestern property of Sydney

At the time, the police attended the building and started a search for 24-year-old James French
Two men, 24 and 34 years old, and a woman, 35, were previously arrested and taken to Castle Hill's police station.
However, they were released pending further research.
The police of the Hills Police Area Superintendent Naomi Moore said that the police found French in a house they had previously searched.
'It is an address that is known to us and is known to him. Today it was part of our follow-up, we went there and found him in a vehicle sleeping on the building, “she told the media outside the Castle Hill police station, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.
“These people were known together, it was not random attack.”
She said that Frans was probably tired after the search and the police fed him before they started interrogating him.
“When he is ready, we offer him the chance to be spoken against,” said chief inspector Moore.
A post-mortem study by Birch's body suggested that he had died of a 'blunt force injury', the inspection was not decisive.

The police thanked the community for their patience when badly armed police were looking for French

French had reportedly slept in the back garden while he avoids the police from the police
The police claimed that Birch and French were employees in drug trafficking.
Superintendent Moore thanked the local community for their patience after the police had combed the sleepy suburb.
“There have been reports of this person who camps in the back garden,” she said, according to the Daily Telegraph.
“That comes with fear. The community was undoubtedly in fear while they waited until we do our work … Today is a good day for us to relieve that fear. '