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Evil John Rytting who fed fatal cocktail of drugs to four-year-old Poppy Widdison dies in prison

News RoomBy News RoomMay 8, 2026
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A life of staggering cruelty reached its grim conclusion this spring, as John Rytting, the man convicted for his role in the drug-induced death of a four-year-old girl, died in prison at the age of 49. The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman confirmed his death, which occurred on April 22, and has initiated the mandatory investigation that follows any death in custody. Rytting had been serving a 13-year sentence imposed in 2017 for child cruelty, a charge that stemmed from the horrifying and senseless loss of a child named Poppy Widdison. His passing closes a chapter on a figure who met the judicial consequence for his actions with a chillingly indifferent “whatever,” a response that encapsulated the profound moral emptiness at the heart of this tragedy.

The story is centered on Poppy, a little girl whose short life was framed by neglect and exploitation from its very beginning. In June 2013, emergency services discovered her lifeless body in Rytting’s squalid flat in Grimsby, a home described in court as a “drug den.” The environment was strewn with both prescription medications and illegal narcotics, a toxic playground for a vulnerable child. While her exact cause of death was medically inconclusive, toxicology tests revealed a devastating truth: Poppy’s system contained a cocktail of dangerous substances, including diazepam, heroin, methadone, and ketamine. Evidence suggested she had been administered these drugs, which the adults callously referred to as “blue Smarties,” for up to six months prior to her death, a sustained period of poisoning that culminated in a fatal cardiac arrest.

The adults responsible for this nightmare were Rytting and Poppy’s own mother, Michala Pyke. The pair were in a relationship at the time and, according to the presiding judge, viewed the innocent child as little more than an “inconvenience” to their lifestyle. Judge Jeremy Richardson QC delivered a searing condemnation, stating they both “bear a huge responsibility for the death of a pretty and vivacious little girl.” The court heard that Poppy was born addicted to heroin, a fact the judge noted with anguish, observing that her name was derived from the plant used to make the drug—a detail he believed was no accident but a symbol of Pyke’s “deplorable attitude.” Pyke, branded an “unfit mother,” was also sentenced to 13 years for her active role in administering drugs to her daughter.

John Rytting’s role extended beyond the abuse within the home; he was a significant drug dealer, described by Judge Richardson as operating not “a corner shop but a large convenience store for drug addicts.” This context makes the poisoning of Poppy even more harrowing, as the substances that killed her were part of the inventory of his criminal enterprise. The flat at Oliver Court was a hub of this activity, and it was here that Poppy spent her final moments. The image of a child’s life ending amidst such filth and danger, administered drugs by those who should have protected her, stands as a profound failure of basic human decency and guardianship.

The legal outcome saw both Rytting and Pyke held accountable, yet no sentence could ever restore what was lost. Poppy Widdison was a victim of the darkest form of betrayal, her vulnerability exploited by the very people entrusted with her care. The case exposed a horrifying intersection of addiction, criminality, and parental failure. It serves as a grim reminder of the hidden suffering of children trapped in such environments and the catastrophic consequences when adult choices are governed by selfishness and depravity.

With Rytting’s death, the formal investigation by the Ombudsman will seek to determine the circumstances surrounding his passing in prison. While this procedural inquiry unfolds, the enduring legacy of this case remains the memory of Poppy—a life brutally cut short. The story, beyond its distressing facts, is a solemn call to vigilance, emphasizing the societal imperative to protect the most vulnerable and to recognize the signs of concealed despair. The indifference shown by her caretakers in life, symbolized by Rytting’s dismissive courtroom reply, is forever contrasted by the lasting weight of her absence, a reminder of innocence destroyed and a childhood stolen.

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