Beloved actor James Ransone, best known for his role as Ziggy Sobotka on 'The Wire,' has tragically passed away at age 46. The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner ruled his death a suicide by hanging on December 19, 2025. No foul play is suspected, according to authorities.
Oh, Hollywood, why must you break our hearts like this? 😢 James Ransone, the effortlessly chaotic Ziggy from season two of 'The Wire,' left us way too soon at just 46. TMZ reports that he passed away on Friday, December 19, 2025, in Los Angeles, with the medical examiner's office listing the cause as suicide by hanging. LAPD officers responded to a call at a residence, completed a death investigation, and confirmed no foul play was involved.
Ransone's career was a wild ride of gritty roles that stuck with you. He burst onto the scene in the early 2000s with small parts in 'Ed' and 'Third Watch' before stealing hearts (and scenes) as dock worker Ziggy Sobotka in all 12 episodes of 'The Wire's' second season. Critics raved, and fans online still call him one of the show's most memorable characters. From there, he kept the momentum going in flicks like 'Tangerine,' 'Sinister,' 'It Chapter Two' (where he played the older Eddie Kaspbrak), 'The Black Phone,' and even 'Black Phone 2,' which dropped earlier this year. TV gigs? Think 'Hawaii Five-0,' 'Poker Face,' 'Law & Order,' and 'SEAL Team'—the man was everywhere.
But behind the screen, Ransone was brutally open about his demons. He'd battled heroin addiction but stayed sober since 2007, and he spoke candidly about mental health struggles. In 2021, he alleged childhood sexual abuse by his former tutor, Timothy Rualo, in Maryland back in 1992. “The strongest memory I have of the abuse was washing blood and feces out of my sheets after you left," he told The New York Post. "I remember doing this as a 12-year-old because I was too ashamed to tell anyone." That trauma, he said, fueled a lifetime of shame leading to substance abuse.
His wife, Jamie McPhee, shared a fundraiser link for the National Alliance on Mental Illness just days before—heartbreakingly prescient. The couple had two kids, and our thoughts are with them in this unimaginable pain. If you're struggling, please reach out: call or text 988.
Ransone was an icon of raw talent—gone too soon. Was Ziggy's wild energy a glimpse of the fighter he was off-screen? Rest in power, James.