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Fugitive ex-Olympian Ryan Wedding's drug ring still active in Canada, RCMP says

The murderous drug-trafficking network allegedly run by former Team Canada Olympian Ryan Wedding remains active in Canada despite efforts to dismantle the cartel-linked group, the RCMP has confirmed to CBC News. Wedding was added this year to the FBI’s list of ten most-wanted fugitives.

Canadian is among FBI's ten most-wanted fugitives

A composite photo of the same man: In one, he's dressed in a white T-shirt and blue ballcap, with a moustache and arm tattoos. In the other, he's looking at a cellphone while wearing a grey sweatshirt and black T-shirt.
Ryan Wedding is seen in two photos taken sometime in 2024 and distributed by U.S. investigators. The fugitive and former Team Canada member is thought to be living in Mexico, under the protection of the Sinaloa drug cartel. (FBI)

The murderous drug-trafficking network allegedly run by former Team Canada Olympian Ryan Wedding remains active in Canada despite efforts to dismantle the cartel-linked group, the RCMP has confirmed to CBC News.

Wedding was added this year to the FBI's list of ten most-wanted fugitives. He's accused of running a $1-billion US criminal enterprise that routinely shipped tonnes of fentanyl and cocaine throughout North America, and that has been linked to at least four killings in Ontario.

"There certainly are elements of his network that remain in place," RCMP Chief Supt. Chris Leather said Friday, during an unrelated news conference at the Mounties' Ontario headquarters in London.

Leather, the RCMP's officer in charge of criminal operations for the province, said Wedding's alleged drug-trafficking organization remains a target of "multiple ongoing investigations," involving the federal police agency, Toronto police and Ontario Provincial Police.

The Thunder Bay, Ont.-born Wedding competed for Canada as a snowboarder at the 2002 Olympic Games. Now 43, he's been on the run from the RCMP since 2015 when he faced charges related to a cocaine-importing conspiracy.

RCMP officer speaks at a podium with a microphone
RCMP Chief Supt. Chris Leather speaks at a news conference in London, Ont., on Friday. (Thomas Daigle/CBC)

Wedding was also indicted in California last fall, along with 15 alleged accomplices including nine fellow Canadians. He faces eight felony charges, including drug-trafficking offences and murder in connection with a continuing criminal enterprise that used stash houses to store drugs in the Los Angeles area.

"The alleged murders of his competitors make Wedding a very dangerous man," Akil Davis, the assistant director of the FBI's L.A. field office said in March.

WATCH | From Olympian to fugitive:

Ryan Wedding’s path from Olympian to most-wanted fugitive

3 months ago
Duration 6:03
Ryan Wedding once represented Canada as an Olympic snowboarder; now he’s accused of being a drug kingpin and is on the FBI’s most wanted list — with a $10 million US reward being offered for information leading to his arrest. CBC’s Thomas Daigle traces his shocking path from the top of the slopes to the underworld.

The RCMP has said Wedding's network has been "commissioning murders across North America, and laundering significant proceeds of crime."

The U.S. State Department is offering a reward of up to $10-million US for information leading to his arrest.

U.S. prosecutors have said Wedding is suspected of living in Mexico, under the protection of the Sinaloa cartel, once headed by notorious drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán.

Earlier this year, a U.S. State Department official publicly asked Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum to personally intervene to ensure Wedding's capture.

"We hope she will soon take action against major narco-traffickers like Ryan Wedding," Cartwright Weiland, a senior official with the State Department's Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, said at a UN conference in March.

Authorities have also suggested he could be hiding out in Canada, the U.S., Colombia, Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica, or elsewhere.

U.S. prosecutors have said Wedding continues to traffic drugs while in hiding. 

Liam Price, the RCMP's director general of international special services, said earlier this year Wedding "continues to pose one of the largest organized crime threats to Canada, even as a fugitive."

The U.S. indictment unsealed last October lists 18 aliases for Wedding, including James Conrad King, Jesse King, El Jefe ("The Boss"), Public Enemy, Giant and Grande.

Court records from the RCMP investigation in 2015 show an associate of Wedding's introduced him as the "man in charge," and that Wedding openly described himself to an undercover officer as a cocaine importer.

Four of Wedding's co-defendants, who were arrested in Toronto last October, remain in custody in a local jail and face extradition to the U.S. 

His alleged right-hand man, fellow Canadian Andrew Clark, was arrested in Mexico last fall and transferred to U.S. custody in February. 

Police are still searching for the gunman who killed an Indian couple — and shot their daughter 13 times — in Caledon, Ont., in November 2023; an attack that U.S. prosecutors say was ordered by Wedding and Clark. Authorities say the family was targeted in a case of mistaken identity over a stolen cocaine shipment that had come through California.

A man in handcuffs is surrounded by someone in an INTERPOL jacket and a soldier in camouflage
Ryan Wedding's alleged second-in-command, fellow Canadian Andrew Clark, was arrested in Mexico in October. (Omar García Harfuch/Facebook)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas Daigle

Senior Reporter

Thomas is a CBC News reporter based in Toronto. In recent years, he has covered some of the biggest stories in the world, from the 2015 Paris attacks to the Tokyo Olympics and the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II. He's reported from the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster, the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa and the Pope's visit to Canada aimed at reconciliation with Indigenous people. Thomas can be reached at thomas.daigle@cbc.ca.