In the west coast suburbs where cedar scent rides the winter air and teenagers dream of Olympic slopes, there was once a boy whose laughter and snowboard tracks marked the snowy hills of Whistler and local parks around Coquitlam. Ryan Wedding, graduating from Centennial High School in Coquitlam, B.C., was a familiar figure with a big grin and a passion for gliding through fresh powder — a young athlete whose energy seemed boundless and whose future was open to the winds that sharpened his edges.
Back then, the biggest challenges he faced were weather and competition, not headlines or indictments. As a teenager he competed in giant slalom and was part of the Blackcomb Snowboard Club, where peers recall his outgoing nature and competitive spark, qualities that later helped him excel on snow. By 2002, Wedding had fulfilled a dream that few achieve: wearing the maple leaf at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics, competing among the world’s best in parallel giant slalom for Team Canada.
After the Games, he enrolled at Simon Fraser University and worked local jobs, blending into ordinary rhythms outside the elite athletic world. Those early years after sport still seemed part of a future shaped by discipline and possibility — the same qualities that had carried him through international competitions.
But the arc of his life, as outlined in U.S. federal indictments and law enforcement reports, took a stark turn in subsequent years. Wedding faced legal trouble in the mid‑2000s with a cannabis grow‑op connection in Maple Ridge and later an arrest in California for attempting to buy cocaine from an undercover agent — resulting in a four‑year U.S. prison sentence on conspiracy charges. Some saw those as missteps, others as early warning signs of darker paths ahead.
According to U.S. prosecutors and the FBI, Wedding’s journey veered sharply from private athlete to alleged leader of a transnational drug trafficking network, moving tons of cocaine and methamphetamine from South and Central America through Mexico into the United States and Canada. Law enforcement agencies labeled him a dangerous figure whose organization allegedly engaged in violence and murder to protect its operations. Authorities even placed him on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, with a reward of up to US$15 million for information leading to his capture.
His alleged criminal empire drew comparisons with some of the world’s most notorious traffickers, amplifying the stark contrast between the young Coquitlam snowboarder and the man accused of orchestrating a sprawling narcotics network. Yet those who knew him as a youth remember a very different person — one whose love for snow and camaraderie on the slopes seemed far removed from any life of crime.
In recent weeks, Wedding was arrested in Mexico City and extradited to the United States to face an array of felony charges, including drug trafficking, conspiracy to murder, witness tampering, and money laundering. In a California federal court, he has pleaded not guilty, and legal proceedings are now underway as prosecutors prepare for trial.
The story of Ryan Wedding — from outdoor youth to Olympic athlete, and now to a figure at the center of a major international criminal case — resonates not only because of its dramatic turns, but because of the questions it raises about how early promise can evolve into darker shadows. For those who shared snow camps with him, nothing in his boyhood hinted at the trajectory that would pull him into headlines entangled with transnational crime and law enforcement across continents.
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Sources : Yahoo News Canada ABC News Global News Reuters (via Yahoo/Associated Press) FBI press materials

