FBI Seizes Ultra-Rare $13 Million Mercedes From Fugitive Olympic Snowboarder Who Is Allegedly One Of The World's Biggest Drug Kingpins

By on November 26, 2025 in ArticlesCelebrity Cars

The life of a former Olympian can be pretty sweet. Even if you never medal, simply making it to the Games is often enough to secure a comfortable post-athletic career. You can move anywhere in the world, charge premium rates to train the next generation of competitors, or make a living coaching wealthy amateurs who just want to brag that they learned from an Olympian. Plenty of former athletes parlay their moment on the world stage into decades of steady work.

Take Jonny Moseley, for example. Jonny actually grew up in the same town as me, though he is a few years older. After bringing home gold from Nagano, he proceeded to carve out a successful career as an MTV host, a video game narrator, a radio personality, and a durable media figure nearly 30 years after his Olympic run.

Here's another fun fact about Jonny: My friend worked at a pizza parlor Jonny frequented right around the time of his Olympic win. Without fail, whenever he came in to eat, some patron would ask to see his gold medal. They probably assumed he did not have the medal on him, because who would months later… but guess what? Jonny would proceed to produce the gold medal from his pocket. Why? Jonny carried the medal in his pocket for well over a year after he won because people were constantly asking to see it and… why the hell not provide them with a thrill? Pretty rad move. But I digress.

Canadian former Olympian Ryan Wedding has enjoyed a slightly different trajectory in the years since he competed at the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City. Instead of picking up endorsements or transitioning into broadcasting, U.S. federal prosecutors allege he reinvented himself as one of the most prolific cocaine traffickers on Earth.

How prolific?

Investigators have compared the scale of his operation to the empires once run by El Chapo and Pablo Escobar, claiming Wedding oversaw a billion-dollar narcotics pipeline that moved staggering quantities of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico and into the U.S. and Canada.

And this week, federal agents made a particularly eye-popping move: they seized an ultra-rare 2002 Mercedes-Benz CLK-GTR Roadster worth an estimated $13 million:

The car seized by federal agents is a 2002 Mercedes-Benz CLK-GTR Roadster, a model so rare many collectors will go their entire lives without seeing one in person. Mercedes originally built the CLK-GTR to satisfy FIA homologation rules for GT1 racing, which required a tiny number of road-legal versions to be produced. The company made 20 coupes and an even smaller batch of Roadsters. Only six were ever built, making the Roadster one of the scarcest production supercars in modern automotive history. When one of these cars does come to market, bidding typically begins in eight figures.

According to investigators, the CLK-GTR Roadster seized this week was purchased using illicit proceeds tied to Wedding's alleged drug empire. Authorities say the vehicle was part of a broader pattern in which Wedding and his associates converted narcotics profits into high-value assets that could be hidden, transferred, or traded outside of traditional banking systems. As the investigation expanded, the car's ownership trail helped prosecutors connect multiple shell companies, money-handling intermediaries, and individuals who allegedly helped Wedding move cocaine profits across borders.

The vehicle is now in federal custody, and unless the courts determine it was unlawfully seized or unconnected to criminal activity, it will likely be forfeited and eventually auctioned by the government. If that happens, it could become one of the most expensive cars ever sold through a law-enforcement forfeiture process.

From Olympian To Kingpin

Ryan Wedding grew up in Thunder Bay, Ontario, in a wealthy family with deep roots in winter sports. His grandparents owned the Mount Baldy ski resort overlooking Lake Superior, and it was there that he first learned to snowboard. By his late teens he had become one of Canada's top young riders, specializing in the parallel giant slalom, a discipline that requires technical precision and exact timing. His results on the World Cup circuit earned him a spot on Canada's Olympic team, and in 2002 he represented the country at the Winter Games in Salt Lake City.

Wedding competed in the men's parallel giant slalom and placed 24th. The finish didn't bring fame or sponsorships, and after the Games he continued competing for a short period before quietly retiring from professional snowboarding. What followed was a period federal investigators would later describe as the turning point in his life. According to court records, Wedding's first major brush with criminal activity came in 2008, when he and two associates traveled to San Diego to purchase cocaine. The seller turned out to be working with the FBI. Wedding was arrested, convicted in 2009, and sentenced in 2010. During his sentencing hearing, he apologized to the court and said the pursuit of "easy money" had lured him into making "stupid and irresponsible decisions," adding, "I guess I lost my way." Believing he showed genuine remorse, the judge imposed a lighter sentence. With credit for time served, Wedding was released from federal prison in December 2011.

Prosecutors say his regret was short-lived. After his release, investigators allege Wedding began building a large-scale narcotics enterprise operating between British Columbia, Southern California, and Mexico. Federal indictments describe him as the architect of a drug pipeline that used long-haul semitrucks, stash houses in Los Angeles, maritime routes from Colombia, and distribution hubs across western Canada. The organization allegedly laundered its proceeds through shell companies, crypto channels, couriers, and luxury assets. According to officials, Wedding's role grew to the point where he earned the nicknames "El Jefe," "Public Enemy," and "Giant," with investigators comparing the scale of his operation to the empires once run by El Chapo and Pablo Escobar.

At a recent press conference announcing new charges, former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi said Wedding's network was responsible for importing roughly 60 metric tons of cocaine per year into Los Angeles alone, generating more than $1 billion in annual revenue. Prosecutors further allege that Wedding maintained his control through violence and intimidation, ordering hits on rival traffickers and putting a multimillion-dollar bounty on a federal witness who was preparing to testify against him. That witness was later murdered in Medellín, Colombia. Additional indictments accuse Wedding of directing a Canadian-based assassin crew, orchestrating multiple retaliatory killings, and using a now-defunct Canadian website to help locate his targets.

Authorities say several close associates helped enable his rise. His wife, Miryam Andrea Castillo Moreno, is accused of laundering money and assisting with acts of violence. His alleged security chief, Edgar Aaron Vazquez Alvarado — known as "The General" — is believed to be a former Mexican law enforcement officer who provides protection and intelligence. And a Canadian attorney, Deepak Balwant Paradkar, is accused of facilitating bribery, connecting Wedding to traffickers, and even advising on murder plots. Paradkar was arrested this week.

By the time U.S. and Canadian agencies unraveled the full structure of the operation, investigators described Wedding as one of the most prolific and violent cocaine distributors in the world. Those findings ultimately placed him on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list, triggered sweeping sanctions, and set off the multinational crackdown that led to the seizure of his $13 million Mercedes.

The Manhunt Continues

Despite the sweeping arrests and the seizure of high-value assets like the $13 million Mercedes, Ryan Wedding remains at large. Federal officials believe he is hiding somewhere in Mexico, protected by cartel affiliates and shielded by a close-knit network of loyal intermediaries. The State Department has posted a $15 million reward for information leading to his capture — one of the largest fugitive rewards ever offered in North America. Investigators say Wedding frequently changes locations, uses intermediaries to communicate, and may alter his appearance, but they remain confident the walls around him are closing in.

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