A former Olympic snowboarder has been arrested for allegedly leading a violent, international drug trafficking operation powered by cryptocurrency.
Key Takeaways
- Ryan James Wedding, a Canadian ex-Olympian, was arrested in Mexico City after being on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list since 2025.
- He is accused of running a large-scale cocaine trafficking operation linked to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, using crypto and stablecoins like USDT to move and launder money.
- The U.S. government has seized $3.2 million in crypto assets, firearms, and cocaine connected to his organization.
- Prosecutors also allege murder and retaliatory violence, including the killing of a federal witness and shootings in Canada.
What Happened?
Ryan James Wedding, once a celebrated Olympic snowboarder, has been arrested in Mexico for allegedly orchestrating a massive drug empire that laundered money using cryptocurrency. U.S. authorities say Wedding’s network was involved in trafficking hundreds of kilograms of cocaine and linked to violent crimes and international money laundering schemes.
The FBI confirmed that Wedding was taken into custody in Mexico City and is being extradited to the United States to face charges including drug trafficking, murder, and running a continuing criminal enterprise.
Thanks to President Trump’s leadership and commitment to global law enforcement – as of this morning, the DOJ/FBI officially apprehended our SIXTH Top Ten Most Wanted Fugitive within the last year. Thank you to @AGPamBondi for her relentless pursuit of justice, the US Attorney’s… pic.twitter.com/fnSP4IXQRI
— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) January 23, 2026
The Rise and Fall of Ryan Wedding
Ryan Wedding’s transition from Olympic athlete to international fugitive has stunned many. Once representing Canada on the world stage, he now faces some of the most serious federal charges in the U.S. justice system. The FBI, Department of Justice, and Treasury Department have all been involved in investigating and dismantling the criminal enterprise he allegedly led.
Violent Crimes and Indictments
Authorities also allege that Wedding ordered retaliatory shootings in Canada and orchestrated the murder of a cooperating federal witness in Colombia. A superseding indictment unsealed in June 2024 includes charges for:
- Operating a continuing criminal enterprise.
- Major narcotics trafficking.
- Murder and conspiracy to commit murder.
These charges place Wedding among the most high-profile fugitives brought to justice in recent years. His arrest followed a year-long international manhunt and carried a reward of up to $15 million for tips leading to his capture.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
This story reads like a Hollywood script, but it’s painfully real. I found it especially shocking how cryptocurrency was used not just as a side channel, but as the core infrastructure for laundering money tied to violent crime. In my experience covering crypto crimes, the Ryan Wedding case shows the urgent need for better tracking tools across multiple blockchains. It serves as a chilling reminder that while crypto offers freedom and innovation, it is easily exploited when oversight fails. Wedding’s downfall is a tragic tale of corrupted ambition and a major warning shot for the crypto space.