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Ex-Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding charged with ordering killings in cocaine trafficking ring

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An ex-Olympic snowboarder who remains a fugitive is facing federal charges alleging he ordered killings as part of a cocaine trafficking ring that ran stash houses in Los Angeles and trafficked drugs across North America, an operation prosecutors have described as ruthless and deadly.

Ryan James Wedding, 43, competed for Canada in the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games before he was convicted in 2010 of attempting to buy cocaine from a U.S. government agent. He is currently on the run and living in Mexico, federal prosecutors say, as he faces eight felony charges including murder in connection with a continuing criminal enterprise and drug crime. A superseding indictment unsealed Thursday details charges against him and 15 other defendants.

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Ryan Wedding, 43, in a photo released by the FBI in late 2024.

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The FBI has announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and extradition of Wedding, who authorities say should be considered armed and dangerous. 

A federal warrant for his arrest was issued on Sept. 17.

“For the last 13 years, Wedding ran this criminal enterprise,” U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California Martin Estrada told reporters during a news conference Thursday, describing the alleged drug ring as a “ruthless” operation that made billions of dollars.

Several defendants already arrested in the case are scheduled to appear in court this coming week in Miami, Los Angeles and Michigan. 

Ryan Clark, 34, is a fellow Canadian citizen who has been described by prosecutors as Wedding’s right-hand man. He was arrested on Oct. 8, according to federal prosecutors.

In November 2023, Wedding and Clark allegedly ordered the killing of a couple who was visiting Canada from India. They had believed the two people were responsible for a lost cocaine shipment, Estrada said, but that wasn’t actually the case.

“This was a case of mistaken identity,” Estrada said. “They were killed in cold blood in front of their daughter, who was also shot 13 times.”

On average, the drug trafficking operation would allegedly ship around 60 tons of cocaine through North America, Estrada said. For instance, in March 2024, it allegedly delivered 293 kilograms of cocaine, or about 646 pounds, for shipment and distribution to Canada and another shipment the following month contained 375.1 kilograms, or 827 pounds, of cocaine, federal authorities said.

Prosecutors said several defendants possessed about 1.8 tons of cocaine with a street value of around $23 to $25 million.

Multiple murders were committed as part of the drug network and cryptocurrency was used to launder millions of dollars — federal investigators seized $3 million from one cryptocurrency wallet alone, Estrada said.

“They would use contract killers to assassinate anyone who they saw as an obstacle to their operation,” Estrada said.

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The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California displays seizures made as part of an investigation into an alleged drug ring operating out of Los Angeles and across North America. Prosecutors announced federal charges on Oct. 17, 2024, against 16 defendants including ex-Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding. 

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Mass quantities of cocaine were sourced from Columbia, where it was cooked or manufactured in so-called cocaine kitchens, before being transporting into Mexico, according to federal prosecutors. From there, the cocaine was allegedly trafficked into the U.S. in long-haul trucks and brought into Southern California.

“Once in the United States, they used the Los Angeles area as a hub for their transportation network,” Estrada said, saying Canadian handlers would go to stash houses in LA to coordinate the transportation of cocaine to the East Coast and Canada. 

After reaching the highest level in his sport, Wedding has allegedly spent more than a decade running an expansive — and deadly — drug ring, according to Estrada. “He chose to become a major trafficker and he chose to become a killer,” Estrada said.

This year, in May, Wedding and Clark are accused of ordering the killing of a man who was fatally shot as he sat inside his car in the driveaway of his home. 

Estrada said people killed in connection with the drug operation have been “shot execution-style.”

According to federal prosecutors, Wedding has been known to go by aliases including “Giant,” “El Jefe” and “Public Enemy.”   

As part of the case, investigators have seized more than 1 ton of cocaine, $255,400 in U.S. cash, more than $3.2 million in cryptocurrency, three firearms and dozens of rounds of ammunition. 



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Israel’s proxy war with Iran leaves young children in Gaza and Lebanon burned from head to toe

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Beirut and Gaza — Displaced Palestinians in a tent camp outside the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza woke up in the early morning hours Tuesday to a blazing inferno after an Israeli airstrike. The flames spreading quickly from tent to tent. Civilians who’d sought shelter in the camp said there was only one fire extinguisher to try to quash the blaze.

Residents and rescue workers scrambled to rescue people from the flames, but they could not save Shaaban Al-Dalou, who was burned alive.

His father Ahmed Al-Dalou also suffered agonizing burns, but it’s guilt that was eating him alive when CBS News met him on Wednesday, several days after the strike.

Al-Dalou said that as flames tore through the camp, he found himself faced with an impossible choice.

“I woke up to go to the toilet and when I came back to bed, the sound of warplanes was loud,” he said.

He raced to find his family, but “I didn’t know who I should try to save.”

“I saw Shaaban sitting up and, although he was on fire, I thought he could get up and run, so I rushed to rescue my youngest children… I thought everyone was safe.”

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Ahmed Al-Dalou suffered agonizing wounds as flames tore through a tent camp in central Gaza after an Israeli airstrike.

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Al-Dalou managed to pull his younger son Abdul Rahman and his sister Rahaf to safety, but both Shaaban, who would have turned 20 on Wednesday, and his mother were killed in the fire.

“Today is Shaaban’s birthday,” the grieving father told CBS News. “He is celebrating his birthday with his mother in heaven.”

Al-Dalou’s other children were being treated for severe burns in a Gaza hospital ill equipped to handle the overwhelming casualty count.

Every day, more burn victims, young and old, come through the doors of hospitals across the Palestinian territory.

Layaan Hamadeen, 13, was among them. She was trying to get food for her family when she was severely injured in another recent Israeli strike. From her hospital bed, she told CBS News that she just wants to be a teenage girl again.

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Layaan Hamadeen, 13, was injured in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza while she was trying to get food for her family.

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“I want the war to end,” she said. “I want to wear beautiful clothes and have beautiful hair again… and I long for healthy food like apples and mangos.” 

On Israel’s second front, in its war with Hamas’ allies Hezbollah in Lebanon, the death toll is also rising. Israeli jets continue to pound southern Lebanon and, despite the U.S. voicing concern over the bombing campaign in the capital city of Beirut, there was a fresh series of strikes around the capital Wednesday.

Hezbollah, which, like Hamas, is backed by Iran, has vowed to strike deeper inside Israel after a year of rocket and drone attacks aimed at the country. Israel says Hezbollah has launched well over 10,000 weapons since Oct. 8, 2023. While most are intercepted, a drone did get past Israel’s air defenses about four days ago to hit a military base in the center of the country, killing four soldiers and wounding dozens of other people.

The Israeli military has vowed to keep striking Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon, and it says it only targets the group’s weapons and fighters, but the Lebanese health ministry says the strikes have killed more than 2,300 people over the last month or so, wounded some 11,000 more, and forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes.

CBS News visited the only Lebanese hospital with a full burn unit this week, and found it had tripled its usual number of beds to cope with the number the casualties coming in.

Like many youngsters, 11-year-old Hamoodi seemed unable to tear his eyes away from his phone. It was helping take his mind off the burn wounds covering one side of his body. 

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Hamoodi, 11, looks at his phone in a bed at the Lebanese Geitaoui Hospital in Beirut, Oct. 14, 2024, where he was being treated for burns covering one side of his body, sustained in an Israeli airstrike. 

CBS News/Agnes Reau


The phone is also his only connection to his mother, who was being treated in another hospital. They were both injured in an Israeli airstrike. As he sat there scrolling, Hamoodi still didn’t know that his father and brother were killed in the attack. 

His aunt Jamal Ibrahim said he was asking for them, but she was worried the news could be too much for the boy to bear.

The war’s youngest victims are particularly difficult for Nurse Ali Humaida.

“It’s terrible to see children in pain,” he said, “especially when there isn’t much we can do.”

Already, tiny Yvana, just 21months old, has learned to dread the men and women in blue scrubs.

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Yvana Zayoun, just 21 months old, lays in a bed at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Oct. 14, 2024, where she was being treated for burns to virtually her entire body, sustained in an Israeli airstrike that hit her home.

CBS News/Agnes Reau


She’s wrapped in bandages that cover severe burns, from head to toe. The slightest touch is excruciating, but the bandages must be changed regularly.

Her mother Fatima Zayoun told CBS News their house was hit by a rocket more than three weeks ago.

“I saw my daughter on fire,” she said.

The mother has been inconsolable since that day.

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CBS News correspondent Debora Patta speaks with Fatima Zayoun, as her young daughter Yvana Zayoun lays in a bed at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Oct. 14, 2024, where she was being treated for severe burns sustained in an Israeli airstrike.

CBS News/Agnes Reau


“I don’t care about anything,” she said. “I just want her to get better.”

CBS News Marwan al-Ghoul contributed to this report.



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Charges dropped against Tyron McAlpin, deaf Black man with cerebral palsy whose Phoenix arrest video prompted outrage

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The top prosecutor in Arizona’s Maricopa County announced Thursday that charges against Tyron McAlpin — a Black man who is deaf and has cerebral palsy, and who was seen on video being violently arrested — are being dropped.

The announcement comes after police body camera video of McAlpin’s arrest, which showed two Phoenix police officers repeatedly punching and tasing McAlpin, became public and sparked outcry.

“I have now completed my review and have made the decision to dismiss all remaining charges against Mr. McAlpin,” Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell said Thursday.

McAlpin had been facing three felony charges for allegedly assaulting the two arresting officers and resisting arrest.

Phoenix police officers had been called because a White man was loitering at a convenience store on Aug. 19. That man claimed he had been assaulted and that his phone had been stolen, and he pointed to McAlpin as the culprit. McAlpin was not charged for the incident involving that man and his lawyer says he was wrongfully accused.

In the arrest video, officer Benjamin Harris was seen jumping out of his vehicle and punching McAlpin as officer Kyle Sue rushed over. McAlpin was punched at least 10 times and was also tased repeatedly. Sue can be heard on the video claiming McAlpin bit him and, in the police report from the incident, Harris claimed McAlpin swung at him. 

“Tyron is just trying to avoid getting hurt by an aggressive, out-of-control police officer,” McAlpin’s attorney, Jesse Showalter, previously told CBS News. “He can’t hear any of the commands he’s being given and the assault never lets up and the officers never do anything to de-escalate the situation.”  

The arrest video prompted strong reactions from the NAACP and ACLU, prompting Mitchell to announce she would “personally review the entire file, as well as the totality of the video.”

She also noted Thursday that she had “convened a large gathering of senior attorneys and members of the community to hear their opinions as they pertain to this case” earlier in the week.

The arrest of McAlpin came two months after a scathing report from the Department of Justice found Phoenix police have engaged in a pattern of discrimination and excessive force. 

contributed to this report.



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Harris briefly pauses campaigning to react to Hamas leader’s death

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Harris briefly pauses campaigning to react to Hamas leader’s death – CBS News


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Vice President Kamala Harris reacted to the killing of Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar Thursday after Israel said its military killed the top leader. CBS News reporters Olivia Rinaldi and Zak Hudak join to discuss Harris’ and former President Donald Trump’s latest campaign moves.

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