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U.S. authorities were in contact with Canadian fugitive Ryan Wedding, the former Olympic snowboarder-turned alleged cocaine kingpin, days before his surrender at the U.S. embassy in Mexico City on Thursday, says a prominent Mexican security expert.
David Saucedo, a security analyst who regularly appears in Mexican media offering commentary on security and political issues, says FBI Director Kash Patel decided to travel to Mexico City once U.S. authorities and Wedding had agreed on a time for the surrender.
“I understand that these negotiations were established various days ago,” said Saucedo.
“So [Patel] planned this lightning visit to Mexico, to coincide with the surrender of Ryan Wedding, to bolster the perception that, thanks to him, he obtained this major victory with the arrest of the number one fugitive of the United States.”
Saucedo says his information was based on conversations with Mexican security sources.
David Saucedo is a prominent security analyst who regularly appears in Mexican media offering commentary on security and political issues. (Submitted by David Saucedo)’Intense negotiation’
At a Friday news conference to announce Wedding’s arrest, Patel said his trip to Mexico Thursday to meet with Mexican security officials was pre-planned.
He would not provide any details about the arrest, but did say Mexican and U.S. authorities “worked hand in glove … on the ground” to apprehend Wedding in Mexico City on Thursday night.
In an interview with Vanity Fair, Patel said that Wedding was taken into custody by the FBI’s Hostage Rescue Team after “an intense negotiation.”
FBI Director Kash Patel, left, speaks with RCMP Commissioner Michael Duheme at a Friday news conference in Ontario, Calif., announcing Wedding’s apprehension. (Mike Blake/Reuters)
In a statement released Friday morning, Mexico’s security minister Omar García Harfuch said that a Canadian had surrendered at the U.S. embassy in Mexico on Thursday.
Harfuch spent part of Friday morning on a stage with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum for a news conference in the Mexican Gulf coast city of Veracruz on a seperate issue that lasted about an hour and a half.
He didn’t mention Wedding, and no journalist asked about his apprehension, which was reported by news agencies and published on social media during the news conference.
Saucedo says Mexican authorities were aware that U.S. authorities were in contact with Wedding in the days before the Canadian fugitive’s Thursday surrender.
He says Harfuch likely remained silent on the matter during the news conference so as not to steal Patel’s thunder.
“I think it was a political courtesy,” said Saucedo.
Mexico’s Security and Public Protection Secretary Omar García Harfuch speaks during a Friday news conference in Veracruz, as Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum looks on. (Mexican Security and Public Protection Secretariat)Civil war within Sinaloa cartel
Patel has portrayed Wedding as a modern-day Pablo Escobar, who once headed the fearsome Medellin cartel in Colombia, and has also compared him to Joaquín (El Chapo) Guzmán Loera, one of the former leaders of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.
Saucedo says Wedding managed to move and operate in Mexico City, living between top hotels there while under the protection of “Los Chapitos,” the faction of the Sinaloa cartel still controlled by those loyal to the sons of El Chapo.
“For reasons still unknown, Los Chapitos decided to pull the backing that he had in Mexico and he had to find his own protection,” said Saucedo, adding that this left Wedding powerless with the very real threat of assassination hanging over him.
Without the protection of Los Chapitos, Saucedo says Wedding became a target for those loyal to Ismael (El Mayo) Zambada Garcia, one of the leaders of the Sinaloa cartel.
One of El Chapo’s sons betrayed Zambada in July 2024 and handed him over to U.S. authorities, sparking a civil war within the cartel that has left thousands dead and disappeared in Sinaloa.
WATCH | FBI official on what’s next after Ryan Wedding’s arrest:
FBI official on allegations against Ryan Wedding, what’s next after arrest
Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, outlined some of the allegations against accused drug trafficker Ryan Wedding, some of the work that went into tracking him down — and what comes next in the case against the former Canadian Olympian.
Wedding too trusting of cartel, analyst says
“That was Ryan’s problem, he trusted excessively in Los Chapitos, and Los Chapitos have betrayal tattooed on their skin,” Saucedo said.
“That’s how Los Chapitos have survived for so many years, they’ve betrayed associates, friends, collaborators. Ryan was no exception.”
Saucedo says that it seems Los Chapitos began to provide Mexican authorities with information about Wedding, which may have led to the raids in late December targeting several properties linked to the Canadian.
Authorities seized millions of dollars worth of high-end motorbikes, artwork and two Olympic medals.
With U.S. and Mexican authorities tightening the investigative ring around Wedding, Saucedo says it appears he was running out of options, and when faced with a choice between turning himself over to Mexican or U.S. authorities, he chose the latter.
“The Sinaloa cartel got rid of Ryan to keep the distribution networks, channels, routes and contacts,” said Saucedo.
“I believe that, now, Los Chapitos are going to keep the narco-empire that Ryan left.”