
The Olympic snowboarder's obsession with white powder that left him with a facelift and a $10M bounty on his head
Now, Ryan James Wedding's name is etched on a different list - the FBI 's Ten Most Wanted - accused of trafficking another kind of white powder.
In September 2024, the 43-year-old was among 16 people charged in Operation Giant Slalom, accused of running a billion-dollar cocaine smuggling network spanning from Colombia, through Mexico, and into the US and Canada.
Prosecutors say Wedding - who is otherwise known as 'El Jefe' and 'Public Enemy' - is the alleged leader of the network and has orchestrated multiple drug-related murders, showing a 'callous disregard' for human life.
He is believed to be hiding in central Mexico, using cartel connections to stay beyond the reach of federal authorities.
The FBI said last week there is 'some evidence' Wedding may have recently undergone cosmetic surgery to alter his appearance and further evade detection - but any likeness to the clean-cut Olympian he once was vanished long before he went under the knife.
In March, Wedding was added to the FBI's list of Ten Most Wanted Fugitives. He was last spotted in 2024 (above), but is believed to have undergone plastic surgery
Wedding has been on the run since at least 2015, when he was named in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's (RCMP) two-year Operation Harrington, which uncovered schemes to import cocaine into Canada and resulted in charges against more than a dozen suspects.
Case files show Wedding - then living in Montreal - introduced himself to an undercover agent as a cocaine importer and discussed shipments of up to 2,205lbs by boat from the Caribbean to Newfoundland.
The deal was called off, but three months later, the French Navy seized 467lbs of the drug near Antigua, triggering raids across Canada and 15 arrests. According to the RCMP, the group had planned to move 15 tons of cocaine.
Wedding faced five charges and an arrest warrant was issued; however, he is believed to have fled Canada before police could snare him.
Harrington files cast him as a senior partner in the operation, overseeing encrypted deals under multiple code names, though the precise scope of his role remains unclear.
He has been considered a fugitive of justice ever since.
Then came the DOJ indictment last fall, alleging that Wedding and his supposed right-hand man, fellow Canadian Andrew Clark, led the billion-dollar ring while living in Mexico.
Investigators have publicly linked the pair to four killings in Ontario but have hinted at more orchestrated hits across North America.
The FBI is offering up to $10million for information that leads to his arrest
Prosecutors say the pair ordered the November 2023 killing of Jagtar Singh, 57, and Harbhajan Kaur, 55 - a mistaken-identity hit on a visiting couple from India. Their daughter, shot 13 times and miraculously alive, recalled: 'I heard my mother's last screams. After that, there was complete silence. Only the noises of gunshots.'
In April 2024, Clark allegedly sent a hit list to a gunman known as 'Mr. Perfect' - 'Blow this guy's top off,' he wrote, offering $100,000.
Soon after, 29-year-old Randy Fader was shot dead in his Niagara driveway.
Mr. Perfect was arrested in Toronto two weeks later with 9mm rounds and a white iPhone showing encrypted chats with Clark and additional targets.
Clark, 34, was arrested in Guadalajara in October 2024 and now awaits trial in California with several co-defendants.
Wedding and a handful of his alleged cronies remain on the run.
He has been charged with eight felonies, including three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder.
Authorities believe Wedding is living in Mexico, under the protection of the infamous Sinaloa Cartel.
US authorities are offering $10million for information leading to his arrest.
FBI spokesperson Laura Eimiller told the Toronto Star on Sunday that investigators believe Wedding may have recently had cosmetic surgery to alter his appearance.
'There is some evidence that he may have undergone plastic surgery...so we urge the public to be flexible when considering his appearance,' Eimiller said.
The FBI has not revealed what modifications they believe Wedding has undergone, nor what their evidence entails.
The last confirmed sighting of Wedding was captured by the FBI in 2024. A photograph from the sighting, first shared publicly in March, shows the hulking, six-foot-three, 240-pound disgraced athlete with short hair and a mustache, wearing a blue LA Dodgers cap and a $1,300 Louis Vuitton T-shirt.
Eimiller said that Wedding has been 'sophisticated' in his ability to evade authorities.
The 2024 sighting contrasts sharply with a photo the FBI released of Wedding's driver's license a decade earlier, showing him with a bushy brown beard, long curly hair, and a receding hairline.
The hunt spans agencies across the US, Canada, Mexico and Colombia, with Interpol support. Authorities have seized nearly two tons of cocaine and more than $3.2 million in cryptocurrency.
Prosecutors have alleged that Wedding is still actively trafficking drugs from the shadows, alleging in March 2025 that his network was flooding North America with five tons of fentanyl a month.
Authorities warned he has access to 'a network of hitmen', ready to do his bidding at a moment's notice, meaning anyone who crosses him could be in danger.
One such adversary was Montreal-born Jonathan Acebedo-Garcia, who had recently become a key witness in the investigation into the Wedding web, but was assassinated in Medellin, Colombia, on January 31.
As The Star first reported, Garcia met Wedding in prison in 2011 while they were both serving time for drug-related offenses.
They worked together for more than a decade before Garcia turned on Wedding in 2023, agreeing to help authorities dismantle his criminal operation.
Wedding's fall from the Olympic slopes into the darkest depths of the criminal underworld has been a dizzying downhill run, leaving those who were once closest to him unable to see where - or why - he veered off course.
He was born into a family of skiers in Thunder Bay, Ontario, a small working-class town on Lake Superior. His father was a competitive skier, his uncle had represented Canada, and his grandparents ran a grassroots ski club.
Most of Wedding's time was spent out on the slopes before he could even read. Going to the Olympics felt like a surefire destiny, childhood friends told Rolling Stone in 2009.
'He had no fear,' said Bobby Allison, former national champion ski racer. 'A lot of kids, they say they want to go fast, but they don't really want to go fast. They hold something back, because there's a little bit of fear there of falling. Ryan had none of that.'
Wedding eventually traded his ski poles for a snowboard and won the first race he ever entered at the age of 12.
Three years later, Wedding was selected to join the Canadian national team and began competing all over the world.
Then, at the age of 20, Wedding got his first taste of stardom when he qualified to compete at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.
He finished in a disappointing 24th place in the parallel giant slalom - but his future looked bright.
Friends say it was shortly after enrolling at Simon Fraser University near Vancouver that Wedding's shine started to dim.
He told his father he had plans to reinvent himself as a stockbroker or engineer, but as his sporting career faded, his hunger for glory was replaced by a growing taste for wealth, status, and risky pursuits.
In the early 2000s, Vancouver was home to the most profitable marijuana trade in North America. It was also a hotbed for gang activity, with rival dealers gunning each other down in the streets and in nightclubs as they tussled over turf and fought to corner the market.
Wedding took up a job as a bouncer at a nightclub and began brushing shoulders with gangsters and attending cocaine-fueled parties.
After two years, he decided to drop out of college and told his father he was interested in real estate. Wedding borrowed $250,000 from his father to buy a home that he flipped for a six-figure profit.
Wedding spent the money on a new condo in the Vancouver area and filled its garage with a Hummer, a Ducati, a BMW, and snowmobiles.
Friends were suspicious about Wedding's suddenly lavish spending, but he would shrug off their concerns, assuring them his real estate ventures were booming.
Police, too, grew suspicious and, in 2004, started investigating him, believing Wedding was running a marijuana-growing operation on a friend's farm. It was said they were making so much money they were hauling out trash bags full of cash.
In the summer of 2006, police raided the grow-op and discovered loaded guns in a locked safe, 6,800 marijuana plants, and 86 pounds of dried weed.
The total haul was estimated to be worth $10million. However, with no conclusive evidence linking Wedding to the operation, he was never charged.
Two years later, Wedding wouldn't be so lucky. After losing nearly $1million in a botched cocaine deal and a failed real estate scheme, he travelled to California looking for a score.
There, he brokered a deal to move 53lbs of cocaine. However, it was a sting and he was arrested and later convicted of conspiracy to distribute drugs, which carried a minimum sentence of 10 years.
Wedding - who cut an imposing figure behind bars - successfully negotiated a lesser sentence of 48 months after appealing to the judge: 'As an athlete, I was always taught that there are no second chances, and well, I'm here asking for exactly that.'
It was during his time serving that sentence that Wedding first met Clark, who was also serving time for drug-related offenses, and many other minor players in the Mexican drug market.
One former FBI agent told Rolling Stone: 'We really did just turn him into a much better drug dealer than he ever was.'
Upon his release, police said in 2024 that Wedding allegedly went back to trafficking and built his 'prolific and ruthless organization.'
How long he can stay hidden remains an open question.
In the meantime, all his family can do is wonder what happened to the promising young athlete they once knew.
'You can have every opportunity and still take the wrong path,' his mom said in 2009. 'But it doesn't mean you're a bad person.'
Sixteen years later, the FBI disagrees.
'Wedding went from shredding powder on the slopes at the Olympics to distributing powder cocaine on the streets,' Assistant Director of the FBI's LA Field Office, Akil Davis, said in March 2025.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Democrat ex-FBI director admits he learned unlikely wisdom from popstar to deal with Trump
Former FBI Director James Comey has tried his best to stay culturally relevant, chiming in Sunday with his take on some viral advice from a pop-culture icon. In a video post made on his Substack Sunday, Comey shared that he listens to Swift's music and tries to emulate her softer approach to dealing with President Donald Trump. 'While our elderly makeup-covered president is posting about whether Taylor Swift is still hot and declaring that he can't stand her, what's she doing?' Comey asked. 'Living her best life, producing great music and as she urged all of us to do during the podcast, not giving the jerks power over her mind,' Comey said, referring to the pop icon's recent appearance on the 'New Heights' podcast hosted by her NFL star boyfriend Travis Kelce and his brother Jason Kelce. Trump's most recent attack on Swift came earlier this month when he pitted the pop star against actress Sydney Sweeney, claiming that Swift was 'No Longer Hot' after she endorsed his 2024 Presidential rival Kamala Harris last year. 'She said something about dealing with internet trolls that stuck with me - think of your energy as if it's expensive,' Comey added in his Sunday video. Comey is currently under investigation for implying President Donald Trump 'should be assassinated.' He uploaded a cryptic picture on his Instagram account back in May which featured an assortment of shells arranged to spell out: '86 47.' That specific combination of numbers has been linked to the assassination of Trump and a 'quiet resistance.' The number 86 is considered slang for 'to kill or murder' within some circles, in an apparent reference to a standard sized grave being eight feet long and six feet deep. Trump is the 47th president, so some anti-Trump groups use the two numbers together to indicate that Trump should be assassinated. The former FBI Director's daughter, Maureen Comey, was fired from her post as a prosecutor in the Manhattan US attorney's office last month, a move that was announced by Trump's Attorney General Pam Bondi. The former FBI chief channeled Swift in his Sunday video, after the singer noted during her appearance on the New Heights podcast last week to 'think of your energy as if it's expensive, as if it's a luxury item.' 'Not everyone can afford it. Not everyone has invested in you in order to be able for you have the capital to care about this,' the 'Bad-Blood' singer added. Brittney Mahomes, wife of Kelce's Kansas City Chiefs teammate Patrick Mahomes, was one celebrity who reposted the clip of Swift's advice on Friday morning and wrote, with three applauding emojis: 'That. Is. The. Day.' The star WAG duo's at times rocky friendship appears stronger than ever after the singer's podcast appearance. This time last year, the brand new besties appeared to suddenly be at odds after Mahomes endorsed Donald Trump in the upcoming election while Swift, who has a long-running feud with Trump, backed Harris. Former FBI Director Comey captioned a May Instagram post with 'cool shell formation on my beach walk' under a picture of seashells that appeared to form the shapes for '86 47' Swift also announced her new album on the podcast, with her 12th record 'The Life of a Showgirl' to be released October 3. Three-time Super Bowl winner Patrick revealed Wednesday he had an early heads-up that Swift was finally appearing on the show, telling reporters at practice: I knew before y'all did just because they called me after the podcast was done.' He jokingly corrected himself, adding: 'They didn't call me, they called Brittany. I was in the back of the FaceTime.' Soon enough, Mahomes and Swift will be reunited at Arrowhead Stadium once the Kansas City Chiefs start the new NFL season.


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Report: The most dangerous cities in the US
Advertisement The five most dangerous cities in the United States have been revealed, with a surprising Southern city named as number one. Memphis, Tennessee , has been ranked as America's most dangerous city in a report by US News and World Report, as its unemployment rate remains higher than average and household median incomes sit more than $26,000 below the national average. The report determined the city's danger levels based on 'each city's murder and property crime rates per 100,000 people' obtained through FBI crime reports. Memphis has a crime rate of 112.9 per one thousand residents in a typical year, according to Neighborhood Scout. The chances of becoming a victim of a crime in west Memphis neighborhoods is one in seven, and one in 40 in the southeast. The Memphis Police Department Chief C.J Davis said in a news conference in July that overall crime was down 20 percent year-to-date, WREG-TV reported. 'With six months left in 2025, I'm convinced we are on the right track,' Davis said at the time. FBI crime statistics have reported that violent crime has dropped nationwide over the last two years. Last year, it was reported to have fallen by 4.5 percent and property crime saw an 8.1 percent drop from the year before. Murder rates saw an 11.6 percent decrease in 2023, the largest single year drop on record, the FBI report stated. A recent poll, however, showed that 77 percent of Americans believe crime is on the rise. Following Memphis as the second most dangerous city is Oakland, California, which was recently called out by the president for its rampant crime. According to the City of Oakland, it has a crime rate of 135.68 per one thousand residents. Trump, while announcing the government's deployment of the National Guard to Washington DC, specifically named many major US cities for their criminal reputations. Oakland, according to Trump, is 'so far gone', yet the Oakland Police Department announced a 28 percent drop in crime in the first six months of 2025. In Oakland, police reported a double-digit decrease in reports of aggravated assaults, rapes and robberies, as well as fewer reports of certain property crimes, including a 46 percent decrease in auto thefts. According to the most recent data, the city saw 41 homicides this year compared to 54 last year, a 24 percent decrease. Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee responded to the president with a blunt statement that said: 'President Trump is wrong.' Lee noted the city's falling crime rates and said Trump's remarks were 'not grounded in facts, but in fear mongering,' East Bay Times reported. 'This is not leadership - it's an attempt to score cheap political points by tearing down communities he doesn't understand,' Lee added. Officials fear that should Trump deploy the National Guard to the area, as he has announced for DC, that it would exacerbate already existing crime and incite protests across the state. Carl Chan, an Oakland Chinatown leader, told the East Bay Times that a takeover such as that would be 'disastrous' for the city. 'If they send the National Guard to take over, there will be tons of protests within the city,' Chan said. 'We don't want to go from one extreme to another.' Typically, the National Guard is used for extreme cases, such as natural disasters or in times of extreme protests or riots. Oakland officials have said the city's drop in crime is due to its violence-intervention strategy. Robberies saw a 41 percent decrease, reported burglaries were down 25 percent, and violent crime as a whole was down by 29 percent. 'Our work is far from done,' Lee said, the outlet reported. 'We're going to keep building on this progress with the same comprehensive approach that got us here.' The third most dangerous city ranked by the US News and World Report was St. Louis, Missouri. According to Neighborhood Scout, the city has a crime rate of 77.9 per one thousand residents. Earlier this year, the St Louis Police Department and Mayor Tishaura Jones also celebrated decreasing crime rates. From 2021 to 2024, murders fell from 202 to 150 and aggravated assaults decreased by 24 percent, property crime dropped by 11 percent and 'society' crimes such as drug violations decreased by 15 percent, the St. Louis Magazine reported. By March, the city saw a historic decrease in crime through January and February. The mayor's office said that the 2024 crime period was the fewest homicides in 11 years. St Louis saw a 36 percent decrease in burglaries, a 42 percent drop in auto thefts and a 53 percent decrease in shooting incidents, KMOV St. Louis reported. Jones said: 'One life affected by violent crime is one too many, which is why it is extremely encouraging to see the amount of violent crime continue to drastically drop in St. Louis. 'We have more work to do, but violent crime is on the retreat in St. Louis, and I am incredibly thankful to the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, the Circuit Attorney's Office, the Office of Violence Prevention, and all the community organizations and residents who do so much to make St. Louis safer.' Police Chief Robert Tracy said homicides were down by 50 percent compared to the same time as last year, which more than 90 percent a result of gun violence. 'Too many people carrying firearms, poor conflict resolution skills and they're known to each other,' Tracy said. 'We continue the strategies to see what works and when it works we continue to do it. If it doesn't, finding out where it's going wrong and readjust. You have to do that with community engagement and technology. When you bring that together you start to see some of the success we're having.' The next spot was grabbed by Baltimore, Maryland, as the fourth most dangerous city in the United States. Baltimore, which also took a personal call out by the president over crime rates, has reportedly had a steady drop in homicide rates since 2021, falling from 344 to 200 last year. It has a crime rate of 58.77 per one thousand residents, Neighborhood Scout said. This year, the city has tracked only 84 killings so far, the Baltimore Banner reported. Baltimore, however, is also struggling economically. Its house values sit $159,823 below the national average of $370,489, according to the US News and World Report rankings. The job market has equally struggled with its unemployment rate matching the national average of 4.5 percent. The median household income, however, sits more than $21,000 below the national average of $79,466. Lastly, fifth place was taken by Detroit, Michigan, a city largely renowned for its crime and one that was also targeted by the president. According to Neighborhood Scout, the city has a 1 in 15 chance of becoming a victim of either a violent or property crime and a crime rate of 66.34 per one thousand


Daily Mail
8 hours ago
- Daily Mail
IKEA issues urgent recall for common kitchen item over potential metal ingestion risk
IKEA has voluntarily recalled thousands of garlic presses after discovering small metal pieces could detach. Around 43,830 IKEA 365+ VÄRDEFULL garlic presses were recalled on July 31 due to the malfunction, which poses a laceration or ingestion hazard. The products were sold in stores and online in the US and Canada between March 2024 and May 2025 for about $8. They each have a black rubber handle and a zinc-coated garlic chamber. All the affected products have the IKEA logo on the upper part of the handle. IKEA has received 10 incident reports, including three reports of lacerations and finger splinters. As of now, no injuries or deaths have been reported in the US. The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) advises the product owners to stop using them and return them to IKEA immediately. All shoppers with the affected products will receive a full refund and are not required to provide proof of purchase. Customers who cannot return the item to stores can contact IKEA for instructions on how to dispose of them and be refunded. Around 43,830 IKEA 365+ VÄRDEFULL garlic presses were recalled on July 31 All recalled pressers have the IKEA logo on the upper part of the handle Kitchen utensils, toys and summer essentials have been a prime focus of recalls this season — including KidKraft Farm to Table play kitchens. Backyard Kids urgently recalled 192,000 play kitchens last month after the death of a 23-month-old child who became entangled on one of its parts. The company found that metal hooks meant to hold toy pots and pans can snag a child's clothing — posing a serious strangulation hazard. Over 300,000 kitchen step stools were also recalled on July 31 after a malfunction resulted in at least 34 injury reports. More than 3.6 million hoses sold at retailers including Amazon, Target and Walmart were also recalled last month. The recall came after Winston Products received 222 reports of HydroTech 5/8-inch Expandable Burst-Proof Hoses bursting, causing 29 injuries — including bruises, two sprained bones and five cases of temporary hearing loss. Automobiles have also been a concern after thousands of vehicles were recalled over the past few months.