
BAY RIDGE — Twenty-four years after he lost his firefighter son in the terror attack on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, retired FDNY Deputy Chief James “Jim” Riches was laid to rest on Dec. 1.
Riches died on Nov. 27, Thanksgiving Day, from a 9/11-related illness, according to the Uniformed Fire Officers Association. He was 74 years old.
Riches’ son, Firefighter James Riches Jr., known as Jimmy, was killed on 9/11. The elder Riches spent several months after the terror attack searching for his son’s remains and for the remains of others, painstakingly combing through the rubble where the Twin Towers once stood. Jimmy’s remains were found in March of 2002.
RELATED: Farewell to a Beloved Post-9/11 Champion of the FDNY
“Jim was the leader. He kept us going,” former FDNY Commissioner Salvatore Cassano recalled after the funeral, held at St. Patrick Church in Bay Ridge. “He was on a mission, and we were on the same mission.”
Hundreds of firefighters lined Fourth Avenue outside St. Patrick Church and saluted as a fire truck arrived with Riches’ casket behind a bagpipe band leading the procession.
Father Vincent Biagi, a friend of the Riches family, was the main celebrant at the funeral Mass. Father Peter Purpura and Msgr. Jamie Gigantiello, who are also FDNY chaplains, concelebrated the Mass.

Jim Riches served in the New York Fire Department for 30 years — from 1977 to 2007 — rising to the rank of deputy chief of fire operations.
After his retirement in 2007, he devoted much of his time to advocating for 9/11 first responders and often served as a spokesperson for their families, demanding that their sacrifice not be forgotten.
“Sept. 11 didn’t stop on Sept. 11,” Cassano said.
RELATED: Too Young to Remember Attacks, Breezy Point Kids Visit 9/11 Victims’ Families in Queens
Riches’ advocacy included leading an effort in 2012 to have the National Park Service take over the running of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum to ensure its longevity.
Back in 2009, he traveled to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to represent 9/11 families at a military commission hearing for five men charged with being part of the conspiracy for the terror attack. The case is still tied up in court proceedings.
Cassano, who knew Riches for nearly 50 years, noted that his dedication to duty is reflected in his three surviving sons — Timothy, Danny, and Thomas — all of whom joined the FDNY after their brother was killed.
Sal Albanese, whose daughter is married to Danny Riches, described Jim Riches as “a great family man.”
Riches, he added, was “a great person, a courageous person who gave of himself beyond the call of duty.”
Riches is survived by his wife Rita, his three sons, and eight grandchildren.
Cassano recalled that Riches had a strong Catholic faith that helped others cope in the dark days after 9/11.
“His faith helped us all get through it,” he said.