The murder mystery of ‘Adam’ revisited: ‘I saw a decapitated boy dumped in River Thames – one thing left me in utter disbelief’

Warning: the following contains graphic details of an ugly murder which may shock readers.

My recent post dated March 8, ‘The disturbing evidence that witchcraft is spreading across Britain unchecked… 30 years after discovery of horrific voodoo-style murder …..‘ includes a reference to the discovery of the mutilated torso of a young boy – named ‘Adam’ after the police was unable to identify him. The present post tells the story of the man who discovered the young boy’s torso floating in the River Thames in 2001.

Twenty-five years after Aidan Minter made his shocking discovery, the case has been revisited in a new documentary, The Body in the River, which aired on Channel 5 (article included below).

The murder mystery was never solved. The boy’s identity remains unknown, the perpetrator(s) got away with their heinous crime.

I present the following article published by MyLondon.new for reasons of completeness though it contains little additional news compared to my previous posts.

It is followed by a Daily Mail article on the recently released documentary ‘Boy in the Thames Case’, available on Channel 5.

However, this also contains few new facts. Hence, the mystery remains.
(webmaster FVD)

‘I saw a decapitated boy dumped in River Thames – one thing left me in utter disbelief’

Published: March 13, 2026
By: Daniel Windham – MyLondon

Aidan Minter

Aidan Minter says he will never forget the day he saw a headless boy’s body floating in the River Thames, a horrific discovery that has remained unsolved for more than two decades.

A man who discovered the mutilated body of a young boy in the River Thames has described the moment he realised what he was looking at as one of the most horrifying experiences of his life.

More than two decades after the shocking discovery, the case has been revisited in a new documentary, The Body in the River, which aired on Channel 5. Despite years of investigation, the child’s killer has never been brought to justice.

The victim — later named “Adam” by police — is believed to have been between four and seven years old and originally from Africa. Investigators concluded he had been trafficked into the UK before being brutally murdered in what experts believe was a ritual killing.

The grim discovery was made on September 21, 2001, when IT consultant Aidan Minter was crossing Tower Bridge and noticed something unusual drifting through the water below.

At first, he thought the object might be a shop mannequin with a piece of red cloth attached. But as it passed beneath the bridge, the horrifying truth became clear — it was the torso of a child.

Handout photo issued by ITV London Tonight of a child, named Adam by police
Handout photo issued by ITV London Tonight of a child, named Adam by police(Image: PA)

Recalling the moment years later, Minter said the injuries immediately shocked him.

He told the programme: “So when I saw the the body as it floated under, I remember thinking that the amount of damage that have been done to it was just incredible. I was just in utter disbelief.

“It’s quite alarming when you see it up close because I was only about 30 ft away from me at the time. And the incoming tide was quite fast but it was long enough to see all of that detail.

“All of the injuries that had been inflicted on that. I’ve never seen anything like that before. And. I’ll never forget it. But it is probably one of the most horrific things I’ve ever seen in my life.”

Police recovered the body further upstream near Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre later that day.

Forensic analysis revealed the boy had died after his throat was cut. His arms, legs and head had all been deliberately removed, and those body parts have never been found.

Investigators also discovered he had been fed a strange mixture shortly before his death. Tests showed it contained African river clay, ground bone, vegetation and traces of gold and quartz. He had also been given small amounts of Calabar bean — a toxic plant known as the “doomsday bean” — which can cause paralysis while leaving a victim conscious.

Houses of Parliament, Thames River and Westminster Bridge in London
Houses of Parliament, Thames River and Westminster Bridge in London(Image: Getty Images)

Experts concluded the killing was likely ritualistic, possibly linked to a distorted form of spiritual practices sometimes associated with “muti” killings or certain West African belief systems.

The case sparked international attention, prompting an appeal from former South African president Nelson Mandela.

He said: “The boy comes from somewhere in Africa, so if anywhere, even in the remotest village of our continent, there is a family missing a son of that age who might have disappeared around that time please contact the police.”

Despite a number of arrests over the years, no one has ever been charged with Adam’s murder.

Former Metropolitan Police commander Andy Baker, who worked on the investigation, believes crucial evidence still exists somewhere in London.

He said: “When you think what that child went through, someone out there knows what happened. Whether that’s the murderer himself or those involved in the murder. There must be a crime scene somewhere. And it’s in London.

“There must be a place where Adam was laid upside down, tilted, head down, and then brutally dismembered and had his throat cut in such a violent way.

Andy Baker of Metropolitan Police
Andy Baker of Metropolitan Police(Image: Channel 5)

“There will still be traces of blood at that premises, so even now I’d appeal to anyone who knows anything. If they know where it is, we can go and get that forensic evidence. And then it starts again.”

Over the years, detectives uncovered evidence linking the boy to Nigeria. Pollen samples and scientific analysis suggested he had lived near Benin City before being brought to Europe.

A woman named Joyce Osagiede later admitted she had cared for the boy in Hamburg, Germany, where she purchased the distinctive orange shorts he was wearing when his body was found. However, investigators were unable to gather enough evidence to charge her or anyone else.

Multiple theories emerged, including the possibility that the child — whose real name may have been Ikpomwosa or Patrick Erhabor — had been trafficked before his death.

In 2006, Adam was buried in an unmarked grave in London.

Today, the case remains one of the most disturbing unsolved murders in British criminal history. For those who worked on it — and for the man who first spotted the body — the lack of answers still weighs heavily.

Detective Nick Chalmers, who was part of the investigation, said: “This was an innocent young child. There are people responsible for his death who haven’t been brought to justice. Twenty years on, I wish we knew the identity of Adam – and his parents. In reality, he is a missing child from a family, who probably don’t know he’s buried here in London.”

‘The Body In The Thames’ is available to watch and stream on Channel 5

Source: ‘I saw a decapitated boy dumped in River Thames – one thing left me in utter disbelief’

More:

Boy in the Thames case


Published: March 12, 2026
By: MARK DUELL, DEPUTY CHIEF REPORTER (DIGITAL)

The longest unsolved child murder case in modern UK history could still be answered because ‘someone out there knows what happened’, a retired detective has said.

‘Adam’ was a name given by Scotland Yard to a young boy whose dismembered body was discovered floating in the River Thames in London on September 21, 2001.

The child’s identity remains unknown 25 years later with no one ever charged despite an investigation that took police to South Africa, Holland, Germany and Nigeria.

Adam, who is thought to have been a Nigerian boy aged five or six, is believed to have been trafficked to the UK via Germany then murdered in a ritualistic killing.

His body, which had the head and limbs severed, was discovered near the Globe Theatre and numerous high-profile appeals followed, including by then President of South Africa Nelson Mandela.

Now, a new Channel 5 documentary called ‘The Body in The River’ which aired last night has re-examined the heartbreaking and disturbing story of Adam.

Despite a series of people being arrested, there has never been a charge over his murder – but police still believe the evidence they need is somewhere in London.

Andy Baker, a former Metropolitan Police commander who worked on the investigation, has told the programme that the case could still be solved.

The spot near the Globe Theatre where the boy’s torso was found in the River Thames in 2001
A photo was released in 2011 claiming to be Adam – but this claim was withdrawn a year later
A police officer shows a pair of shorts found on Adam when his torso was discovered in 2001

He said: ‘When you think what that child went through, someone out there knows what happened. Whether that’s the murderer himself or those involved in the murder. There must be a crime scene somewhere. And it’s in London.

‘There must be a place where Adam was laid upside down, tilted, head down, and then brutally dismembered and had his throat cut in such a violent way.

‘There will still be traces of blood at that premises, so even now I’d appeal to anyone who knows anything. If they know where it is, we can go and get that forensic evidence. And then it starts again.’

The boy’s body was discovered by a passing businessman called Aidan Minter who spotted it while walking across Tower Bridge just ten days after the 9/11 attacks.

He initially thought it was a tailor’s mannequin, but realised it was a child’s dismembered and decapitated torso – and police pulled this from the water.

Investigations found the black boy could have been in the water for up to ten days after having his throat slit. His arms, legs and head were all amputated.

Police had few clues on his identity, other than a pair of orange shorts he was wearing – but appealed to the public for help, including on Crimewatch.

Some 60 people called the BBC show in an attempt to help and detectives offered a reward of £50,000 for information that led to a murder conviction.

Police also took specialist pathologist advice from as far afield as Africa and carried out groundbreaking work on DNA and pollen samples inside the body.

Officers established that the boy had been drugged with a ‘black magic’ potion and sacrificed in a voodoo-style ritual killing before being thrown into the Thames.

They used pioneering techniques to trace radioactive isotopes in his bones to his native Nigeria – and even asked Mandela to appeal for information, which he did.

But they always struggled to identify the boy, despite travelling to Nigeria to try to trace his family. Detailed analysis of a substance in the boy’s stomach was identified as a potion which included tiny clay pellets containing small particles of pure gold.

Andy Baker, a former Metropolitan Police commander who worked on the Adam investigation, has told a new Channel 5 documentary that the case could still be solved 25 years later
A graphic prepared by Scotland Yard detectives investigating the murder of Adam in 2001
ITV News tracked down Joyce Osagiede in Nigeria in 2011, and she said Adam was the boy in the photo – and his real name was Ikpomwosa, although withdrew this claim one year later

This indicated that Adam had suffered a Muti ritual killing, when a victim’s body parts are removed and used by witchdoctors as ‘medicine’ based on a belief that the body parts of children are sacred. The bodies are then often disposed of in flowing water.

Another theory was he was a human sacrifice linked to Yoruban beliefs in Nigeria, in an offering to the goddess Oshun – typically associated with water and fertility.

Police had a breakthrough in July 2002 when social workers in Glasgow were alerted to the safety of two girls living with their African mother Joyce Osagiede.

She had ritualistic objects in her home and spoke about cults, killings and of sacrifices during a family court hearing – which led to police searching her property.

Detectives found clothes with the ‘Kids & Company’ label – the same one as on Adam’s shorts – and in the same sizes as his clothing. Osagiede was then arrested.

Officers never charged her, but by December that year police had determined his birthplace to a strip of land around Benin City in Nigeria – Osagiede’s home city.

German police discovered she had lived in Hamburg until late 2001 – the city where the orange shorts found on Adam’s body were believed to have been purchased.

Osagiede was eventually deported after the Home Office rejected her asylum application but disappeared after arriving in Lagos on a chartered private jet.

Officers found she had a contact in her phone for a man called Mousa Kamara, and discovered evidence of Nigerian rituals known as Juju at his London home.

Kamara, whose real name turned out to be Kingsley Ojo, was arrested but released on bail because there was no evidence directly linking him to Adam’s murder.

Police did however charge Ojo with people smuggling and using fake documents to obtain a passport and driving licence. He pleaded guilty and was jailed for four years.

Kingsley Ojo was arrested but released on bail because there was no evidence directly linking him to Adam’s murder. Police did however charge Ojo with other offences and he was jailed
Detective Inspector Will O’Reilly and John Azah lay a wreath on the Thames for Adam in 2002

While in prison, Ojo contacted police and said he wanted to help track down the killer, feeding them information for two years following his release. But officers eventually determined they could not rely on him, and he was deported back to Nigeria in 2008.

By 2011, another lead came when police searched through Osagiede’s belongings left with a friend in Germany and found a photo of a boy aged about five taken in 2001.

ITV News tracked down Osagiede in Nigeria, and she claimed Adam was the boy in the photo – and his real name was Ikpomwosa. She said she looked after him then gave him to a man called Bawa. But detectives could not positively identify the boy.

One year later, Osagiede’s brother Victor contacted BBC News and said the boy in the photo was in fact not Adam or ‘Ikpomwosa’. A reporter travelled to Benin City and found Osagiede, but she appeared confused and gave two other names for Adam.

Osagiede also identified someone in photo as ‘Bawa’ – which was actually a picture of Ojo. The BBC then tracked down Ojo in Nigeria but he continued to deny involvement in Adam’s murder and no evidence has ever linked him to the crime.

Since 2013 the investigation has become a ‘cold case’ with no significant new lines of enquiry – and Victor confirmed in 2020 that Osagiede had died in Nigeria.

Police launched an appeal on the 20th anniversary, with Detective Chief Inspector Kate Kieran saying the case remaining unsolved was ‘incredibly sad and frustrating’.

Speaking in 2021, she added: ‘We recognise people may not have wanted to speak up at the time and may have felt loyal to the person or people involved in this.

‘However, over the past 20 years, allegiances and relationships may have changed and some people may now feel more comfortable talking to us.’

The case has remained unsolved since then, but Scotland Yard will be hoping that the documentary could change this. The Daily Mail has contacted the force for comment.

‘The Body In The Thames’ is available to watch and stream on Channel 5

Source: Daily Mail, March 12, 2026 – Boy in he Thames Case