Thirty years after stumbling upon one of Britain’s most horrific crime scenes, the man who discovered the body of murdered toddler James Bulger has met a tragic end of his own—in police custody. James Riley, who was just 14 when he found the two-year-old’s mutilated remains on a Merseyside railway track in 1993, died on March 14, 2023, at age 44, hours after his arrest for suspected drug offenses. An inquest concluded in May 2025 ruled his death likely due to ingesting drug packets, marking a haunting coda to a life forever scarred by that fateful discovery.

The Bulger case remains a wound on the national psyche. On February 12, 1993, James, aged two years and 10 months, was abducted from a Bootle shopping center by two 10-year-old boys, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson. They subjected him to unimaginable torture before leaving his body on the tracks near Walton, where it was severed by a freight train. Riley and his brother Terence, then 12, were playing nearby when they spotted the corpse, an image that seared into young James’s mind. “It was like something from a horror film,” Riley later recalled in rare interviews, haunted by the boy’s battered face and the blood-soaked clothes.

The discovery thrust Riley into a media storm he never sought. As the boys who found the body, he and Terence were questioned by police and thrust into the spotlight, their innocence shattered by the brutality. Riley, from a working-class Liverpool family, struggled with the trauma, developing anxiety and substance issues that plagued his adulthood. “That day changed me forever,” he told The Mirror in 2013, marking the 20th anniversary. “I see James’s eyes in my dreams. It’s like carrying a ghost.”

Fast-forward to March 2023: Riley was arrested near Chapel Gardens in Liverpool on suspicion of possessing class A drugs. Taken to St Anne Street Police Station, he was placed in a cell alone. Hours later, guards found him unresponsive on the floor. Paramedics rushed him to Royal Liverpool University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 8:45 p.m. Toxicology revealed he had swallowed packages of heroin and crack cocaine—likely to evade detection during arrest—a desperate act known as “body packing” that can prove fatal if packets rupture.

The inquest, held at Sefton Coroner’s Court in May 2025, heard harrowing testimony. Riley’s mother, Sandra, described her son as “a gentle soul broken by that awful day.” Pathologist Dr. Jonathan Rogers confirmed the cause: heroin overdose from a burst packet, with no evidence of foul play. Coroner Kate Keenan recorded a conclusion of “drug-related death,” praising Merseyside Police’s care but noting Riley’s “long-term addiction struggles.” The IOPC investigation cleared officers of wrongdoing, but Sandra called for better mental health support for trauma survivors in custody.

Riley’s life was a shadow of the Bulger tragedy. He battled PTSD, drifting through low-skilled jobs and brief stints in prison for minor offenses. “James’s murder haunted him,” his brother Terence said. “He never talked about it, but it ate him up.” The family, who received counseling in the ’90s, now advocates for youth mental health, donating to the James Bulger Memorial Trust.

The irony is cruel: the boy who uncovered a monster’s handiwork fell victim to his own demons, dying in the system meant to protect. As Venables and Thompson—now in their 40s—live under new identities, Riley’s quiet passing underscores the case’s enduring toll. “He was collateral damage,” Sandra laments. Thirty years on, Bulger’s ghost lingers, claiming another innocent soul. In Liverpool’s gray streets, where pain festers unspoken, Riley’s story begs: When does the haunting end?