The Hidden Museum of a Drug Kingpin: How an Ex-Olympian Allegedly Amᴀssed a $50M MotoGP Collection – And Why the FBI Just Took It
The shadows of a nondescript warehouse in Mexico concealed one of the most astonishing discoveries in recent law enforcement history.
In late December 2025, Mexican authorities, acting on intelligence from the FBI, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and Los Angeles Police Department, executed multiple search warrants across properties linked to Ryan James Wedding—a name that once evoked snowy slopes and Olympic glory but now stands synonymous with transnational terror.

Inside, they uncovered 62 motorcycles valued at an estimated $40 million, a collection so extraordinary it rivals the world’s finest museums.
Many appear to be genuine MotoGP and World Superbike artifacts—machines ridden by legends like Valentino Rossi, Jorge Lorenzo, Andrea Dovizioso, and Casey Stoner—hidden not for admiration but allegedly as a shadowy ᴀsset in a vast criminal empire.
Wedding, 44, competed for Canada in giant slalom snowboarding at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics, finishing 24th in a single event.
What followed his athletic career was a dramatic descent into the underworld.
U.S.authorities allege he transformed from an Olympian into a high-level operator for the Sinaloa Cartel, orchestrating mᴀssive cocaine shipments—hundreds of kilograms at a time—from Colombia through Mexico and Southern California into Canada and beyond.
The scale was staggering: billions in revenue, violent enforcement, and a network that made him one of the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives since March 2025.
A $15 million reward from the U.S.State Department—raised amid escalating violence—loomed for his capture.

The case darkened further with allegations tying Wedding to the January 2025 murder of a federal witness in Medellín, Colombia.
Prosecutors claim he ordered the killing to silence potential testimony against his operation.
Authorities describe him as a “modern-day Pablo Escobar” or “El Chapo,” hiding in Mexico under cartel protection for over a decade while laundering wealth through cryptocurrency, rare vehicles, and now this improbable motorcycle hoard.
The seizures began earlier in December 2025 with a $13 million 2002 Mercedes CLK GTR—one of only six ever made—believed linked to Wedding.
Then came the motorcycles: 62 bikes stacked in layers like a private racing pantheon.
PH๏τos released by the FBI show rows of Ducatis dominating the foreground—multiple ex-Valentino Rossi MotoGP machines (at least three, including different liveries and eras), Andrea Dovizioso Ducatis (two distinct), Jorge Lorenzo bikes (multiple), Casey Stoner test units marked “T2,” and Casey Stoner-era machines.
Historic gems include Freddie Spencer’s legendary double-championship 250cc from 1985 (the year he won both 250 and 500 тιтles), Wayne Gardner’s 1987 NSR500, Giacomo Agostini’s MV Agusta 500 Triple, Ron Haslam’s ELF bike, and Carl Fogarty’s World Superbike contender.
Rarer still: Ducati Supermono, TTF2 prototypes, Suzuki GSX-R750RR, and obscure World Superbike machines like Scott Russell’s, Akira Yanagawa’s, and possibly James Toseland’s number-one WSBK.
Even older classics—Paul Smart-style Ducati 860 GT replicas, Hailwood 900 SS, and vintage British machines—fill lower tiers.
Experts marvel: these aren’t replicas or fakes; many are authentic race bikes manufacturers typically crush or lock away to prevent tech leaks.
MotoGP teams destroy or secure prototypes; private sales are rare, often through auctions (Bonhams, Sotheby’s) or direct manufacturer deals to vetted collectors years later.
How did Wedding amᴀss this? Investigators suggest three paths: riders buying their bikes post-season (sometimes gifted for championships), manufacturers selling aged ᴀssets privately to high-net-worth buyers, and high-profile auctions.
Wedding’s alleged wealth—funneled from cocaine billions—provided access.
The collection served dual purpose: status symbol and liquid ᴀsset.
Small, portable, and high-value, bikes could be dispersed quickly if authorities closed in—unlike cash piles or real estate.
The raid тιԍнтens the noose.
Wedding, once untouchable, now faces intensified pressure.
In January 2026, reports emerged of his arrest in Mexico, extradition to the U.S., and a not-guilty plea to drug and murder charges.
The motorcycles—now evidence—could fetch far more at auction, their provenance tainted yet irresistible to collectors.
What began as Olympic dreams on snow ended in a warehouse of stolen glory, hidden fortunes, and alleged bloodshed.
This isn’t just a seizure; it’s a window into how crime infiltrates pᴀssions.
The bikes—symbols of speed, precision, and human triumph—now testify against their alleged owner.
As the case unfolds, questions linger: How many more treasures hide in cartel vaults? And what other shadows lurk in the motorsport world?