The death of Londonâs Burning star John Alford is not being treated as suspicious after the actor was found dead in his prison cell.
Alford, whose real name was John Shannon, died just weeks after he was sent to prison for sexually abusing two young girls.
He was found unresponsive on his bed when staff opened his cell door at HMP Bure in Norfolk on Friday, it has been reported.
The Daily Mail understands Alfordâs death is not being treated as suspicious.
In a statement, a Prison Service spokesperson said: âJohn Shannon died in prison on 13 March 2026. As with all deaths in custody, the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman will investigate.â
The former Grange Hill actor was jailed in January for eight-and-a-half years after having sex with a drunk 14-year-old at a house party and sexually assaulting her 15-year-old friend.
Glasgow-born Alford, 54, had been left with his two young victims in the early hours of the morning after others at the house went to bed.
He had sex with the younger girl in the garden after asking her to sit on his lap while he had a cigarette and again later in a toilet.
Alford, a father-of-two, sexually assaulted the older girl as he sat between the two victims while they were âdozing offâ at the Hertfordshire house.

Alford committed the sexual offences in 2022 and was convicted by a majority verdict of six charges
He had denied the offences and claimed he was the victim of a blackmail plot after someone rang him and tried to âextort money from meâ.
Alford was in the BBC school drama Grange Hill in the 1980s and played Billy Ray in Londonâs Burning from 1993 to 1998.
On the night of his assaults â April 8, 2022 â Alford had spent the evening at a pub with the father of a third girl before going to the property where the offences took place.
After others went to bed, he was left alone with his victims, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
He bought a bottle of vodka at a nearby petrol station before returning and asking the 14-year-old to sit on his lap when he went to the garden for a cigarette.
Alford kissed the girl before having sex with her.
Later in the evening, Alford had sex with the girl again in a downstairs toilet after pulling her on to him.
He then sexually assaulted the older girl while sitting between the two victims.
In a victim impact statement, the younger girl â who had turned 18 by the time of the trial in September â said Alfordâs sexual assault had âaffected me and my family in every wayâ.
She said being hugged by her own father no longer âfeels comfortable because he was a manâ.
She had told the trial she was good friends with the second victim and another friend had invited both to her house in Hertfordshire for the evening.
Tearful as she spoke, the girl said the sex with Alford in the garden lasted âno longer than ten minutesâ, while the second instance in the bathroom lasted five minutes.
Houzla Rawat, defending Alford, suggested she had been âphysically friendlyâ towards the defendant throughout the evening. She replied: âI disagree.â
The victim also denied following Alford into the garden after he went out to have a cigarette.
Asked by prosecutor Julie Whitby why she went along with what Alford told her, she said: âMost children, if an adult is telling you to do something, youâll do it ⊠especially if you are drunk or impaired.â
In a video of her police interview played to the court, she revealed she had never had sex before.
âI told him to stop because I didnât want to have sex with an old man,â she said.
The 15-year-old told officers during her interview how âwe were all just like dozing off⊠that was when John started to touch meâ.
It made her feel âabsolutely sickâ, she added.
Since the assault she said she had tried to take her own life and told the court Alford âdestroyed my mental wellbeingâ.
She said she had showered immediately after being dropped off at the other girlâs house the next day as she was âstressing outâ.
The pair did not mention the assaults at the time because they had been drinking âa fair amount of vodkaâ, the jury heard.
It was only while visiting a different friendâs home on April 11 that the older girl shared the abuse.
âI had a mental breakdown to my best mateâs mum in the garden and she called my mum. (I was) crying, screaming, very sad,â she said.

John Alford played fireman Billy Ray in ITV drama Londonâs Burning from 1993 to 1998
The 15-year-oldâs mother reported Alford to police and he was arrested the following day.
Alford angrily denied touching either girl during his police interview, saying: âNone of this makes sense.
âItâs a set-up. I didnât rape anyone. I am not a nonce. This is f****** scandalous.â
He claimed he had been outside when the then 14-year-old was suddenly âsitting on my lap with her arms around me, trying to kiss me. I recoiled, I stood up⊠I literally had to prise her offâ.
Alford added: âIt was quite obvious that she was very drunk and being flirtatious.
âI did not reciprocate in any way, shape or form at any time.â
Crying while giving evidence in court, he told jurors he ânever touched either of them girlsâ, adding there was âno DNAâ evidence and he would stand by his denial âuntil the day I dieâ.
Alford suggested he was the victim of a blackmail plot and described a phone call he received on April 10, 2022, from âan Irish-sounding traveller-type voiceâ.
âHe said âIs that John? Do yourself a favour and come to Broxbourne car park, Hoddesdonâ,â the defendant said.
âI said something stupid like âIâm with my childrenâ. Then he said to bring the money and I said to f*** off.â
The actor told police that they were âgoing to extort money from meâ.
But the jury heard there was no material supporting these claims on the defendantâs phone or those of his young victims.
Hertfordshire Constabularyâs Laura Harrison noted the victims had been âborn long after his career beganâ and had no idea of his status â undermining his claims they were trying to blackmail him.
She added: âThere is no doubt that Shannonâs behaviour that evening was predatory and carried out solely for his own sexual gratification. Reporting offences of this nature is never easy.
âI want to commend the victims for their courage in coming forward and for the strength they have shown throughout this lengthy and complex investigation. Their determination has never wavered and this is testament to their bravery.â
A jury at St Albans Crown Court convicted Alford in January on all six charges he faced by a 10-2 majority after his trial.
As he was handed his jail term, Recorder Caroline Overton said Alford was the âone remaining adultâ at the party.
She added: âYou were a trusted family friend and fully aware that the girls were 14 and 15 years of age.â
Recorder Overton said Alfordâs âfocusâ during the trial was âon the impact to you and your family rather than the victimsâ, which she said âlimits the extent to which mitigation can be appliedâ.
Alford had denied two charges of engaging in non-penetrative sexual activity with a girl aged under 16 and two of engaging in penetrative activity with a girl under 16.
He had also pleaded not guilty to assaulting a female aged 13 or over by penetration with part of body and sexual assault on a female.
His original trial was postponed after it collapsed the day before it was due to start.
As the guilty verdicts were returned on September 5, Alford slumped in the dock with his head in his hands.
He was also heard saying: âWrong, I didnât do this.â
Once one of British televisionâs most famous faces, Alford was written out of Londonâs Burning â which attracted up to 18 million viewers a week â when he was caught in a News of the World âFake Sheikhâ sting.

Alford appeared on Grange Hill as the happy-go-lucky Robbie Wright, performing on its landmark anti-drugs song Just Say No
The actor was found guilty by a jury at Londonâs Snaresbrook Crown Court in 1999 of one count of supplying cocaine to Fake Sheikh Mazher Mahmood and another similar charge involving cannabis resin.
Alford said he had been invited to the meeting with the Fake Sheikh at the Savoy Hotel in London in 1997.
He was offered the chance to attend the celebrity opening of a nightclub in Dubai, where he would get the chance to meet Robert De Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and possibly work with them in future.
During this meeting, Mahmood asked whether Alford would be able to supply some cocaine and cannabis on his behalf.
Mahmood was later convicted of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice after using illegal methods to get stories, but Alfordâs attempts to get his own convictions overturned are understood to have failed.
With his career in tatters, he turned to driving a taxi and scaffolding work to get by.
He was banned from the roads for 16 months in January 2006 for drink-driving after a crash in Islington, north London, in April 2005.
But he was in trouble with the law again in 2018 when he was accused of assaulting two police officers after jumping behind the wheel of a bin lorry left with a smashed windscreen.
The disgraced star sparked chaos in Camden, north London, when he got behind the wheel of a 10-tonne truck.
More than 20 officers in seven patrol cars were joined by an ambulance.
One witness said that the huge police presence suggested they âseemed to respond like it was a terror attackâ.
Footage of the early morning incident showed the former actor initially smiling while behind the wheel of the stationary vehicle.
He then yelled to the man filming him: âI tried to save your truck. It was reversing,â before staggering out of the cab.
Alford can then be heard cheering as the sound of police sirens echoes down the street.


