Sunday, May 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

FBI director confirms arrest of Canadian ex-Olympian and fugitive Ryan Wedding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2026 10:15 AM
  • FBI director confirms arrest of Canadian ex-Olympian and fugitive Ryan Wedding

Former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding, accused of running an international drug ring, has been arrested in Mexico, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation confirmed Friday.

FBI Director Kash Patel said in a social media post that Wedding was taken into custody Thursday night and is being transported from Mexico to the United States to "face justice."

The operation was carried out in collaboration with the Mexican government and with the support of several federal U.S. departments, he said.

"This is a huge day for a safer North America, and the world, and a message that those who break our laws and harm our citizens will be brought to justice," Patel wrote.

Wedding, who authorities said has been on the run for years, is alleged to have ordered the murders of several people, including a witness who could testify against him in a 2024 narcotics case.

The hunt for the 44-year-old from Thunder Bay, Ont., intensified last year after U.S. officials placed Wedding on the FBI's Top 10 most-wanted list and put up a $15-million reward for information leading to his capture.

Wedding competed for Canada as a snowboarder in the 2002 Winter Olympics. Canadian and American law enforcement officials allege that in the years that followed the Salt Lake City games, he became deeply involved in drug trafficking. 

He was convicted in the U.S. of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and was sentenced to prison in 2010. U.S. authorities have alleged that after Wedding's release from prison, he resumed drug trafficking under the protection of the Sinaloa Cartel in Mexico.

U.S. court documents said Wedding's drug trafficking enterprise brought cocaine from Colombia into Mexico, then used semitrailers to distribute the drug in the United States and Canada. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has accused Wedding of being the largest cocaine trafficker in Canada. 

Eight Canadians were arrested in November as part of the ongoing investigation into Wedding, including an Ontario lawyer accused of advising the murder of a federal witness and a jeweller who U.S. authorities allege was the "de facto bank" for the criminal enterprise.

The RCMP have said that Wedding faces separate drug trafficking charges in Canada that date back to 2015.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability
British Columbia's public post-secondary institutions have seen a 70 per cent decline in international students, requiring the province to launch a review in a bid to stabilize the sector, the minister of post-secondary education said.

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade
Police say they have arrested four people during enforcement of a court injunction prohibiting anyone from blocking or interfering with forestry activities in the Carmanah Valley of southwestern Vancouver Island.

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta
British Columbia "has to agree" on any pipeline from Alberta to the Pacific coast, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday, as his government edges closer to unveiling the details of a new energy pact it has been negotiating with Alberta.

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit
Rifts in "Team Canada" appear to be widening on the brink of a federal announcement on a potential pipeline from Alberta to the West Coast, with B.C.'s deputy premier even raising the prospect of legal action against the project.

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit

Carney expected to announce new supports for steel industry hammered by U.S. tariffs

Carney expected to announce new supports for steel industry hammered by U.S. tariffs
The federal government plans to limit foreign steel imports and cut interprovincial rail freight rates in a bid to support Canada's steel industry threatened by damaging U.S. tariffs.

Carney expected to announce new supports for steel industry hammered by U.S. tariffs

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada
The Alberta government is about to take the next logical step in artificial intelligence — using it to draft a proposed law.

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada