Actor James Ransone, best known for his unforgettable role as Ziggy Sobotka on The Wire, has died at the age of 46.
Authorities in Los Angeles confirmed that Ransone was found unresponsive at a property in the Fairfax area on Friday afternoon, December 19.
Police were called to the scene shortly after 2 p.m. Officers reported no signs of foul play, and the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office is handling the case. His death was later ruled a suicide.
Born in Maryland, Ransone discovered acting at a young age after struggling to fit in at traditional public schools. Ransone was the son of Joyce and James Finley Ransone II, who served as a Vietnam War veteran.
”My dad was a Green Beret and he got shot in Vietnam. He had to come home. It really affected him and it still affects him to this day. I only saw the bad parts because that’s my dad,” Ransone once told Interview Magazine.

As a young boy, Ransone attended the Carver Center for Arts and Technology in Towson, an experience he would credit with changing, and even saving, his life.
“I did not fit in well with all of the kids,” he once said. “Adolescence was a really hard time for me — as I think it is for most kids.”
Reflecting on his move to an arts school, he added: “I think it saved me as a kid. Going to arts school saved me.”
Several acclaimed horror films
Ransone went on to build a career marked by intensity and vulnerability, becoming a familiar face on television and in film. In addition to The Wire, he appeared in several acclaimed horror films, including Sinister, The Black Phone, and It: Chapter Two, where he played adult Eddie Kaspbrak alongside Bill Hader, Jessica Chastain, and Bill Skarsgård.
A passionate defender of the horror genre, Ransone often pushed back against claims that it lacked artistic merit, once telling critics to “tell that to William Friedkin or Stanley Kubrick.”
In the popular HBO series Generation Kill, Ransone played Corporal Josh Ray Person. The series is based on Evan Wright’s 2004 book about his time embedded with a U.S. Marine unit during the 2003 Iraq invasion.
”It’s still a highlight of my life – and not just the show. Living in Africa (the series was shot there), being around the dudes who were being written about—since my dad is a Vietnam vet. Being around these marines who had fought in war and they were young, I got to see some version of my dad as a young man,” Ransone shared.

Off screen, Ransone spoke candidly about his struggles. He was open about his battles with addiction, revealing that he became sober at 27 after years of heroin use. In May 2021, Ransone wrote on his Instagram account that he had been sexually abused by his math tutor in 1992. He chose to speak publicly in hopes of helping others feel less alone.
Following news of his death, The Wire creator David Simon paid tribute, calling the loss “grievous and awful.” In a statement, Simon wrote that Ransone committed not only to his craft, but also “to the camaraderie that turns every good film production into something familial and caring.”
James Ransone is survived by his wife, Jamie McPhee, and their two children. In the wake of his passing, McPhee shared a fundraiser benefiting the National Alliance on Mental Illness, honoring his legacy and the causes he cared deeply about.
