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Canadian fugitive Ryan Wedding’s lieutenant to plead not guilty to murder, drug charges: lawyer

Toronto

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An alleged crime boss, accused of orchestrating the shooting of an innocent family in Caledon, Ont., will plead not guilty, his lawyer says. Andrew Clark is described by investigators as the “co-leader” of a transnational drug-smuggling empire, alongside former Team Canada Olympian Ryan Wedding.

Andrew Clark accused of ordering murders on behalf of ex-Olympian’s alleged drug ring

Thomas Daigle · CBC News

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On the left, a bearded man stares straight at the camera. On the right, officers detain a bearded man in a green shirt.

Andrew Clark was arrested in October 2024 in a dramatic operation involving the Mexican navy in the Guadalajara area. Clark, who previously lived in the Toronto area, is scheduled to stand trial in Los Angeles on eight felony charges related to an alleged cocaine-trafficking conspiracy and four killings. (U.S. Attorney’s Office, Central District of California/X/JaliscoRojo)

The alleged crime boss known as “The Dictator” — accused of orchestrating the 2023 fatal shooting of an innocent couple in Caledon, Ont. — will plead not guilty, his lawyer told CBC News.

Andrew Clark is described by U.S. investigators as the “co-leader” of a transnational drug-smuggling empire, alongside former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding. Wedding was recently added to the FBI’s list of 10 most-wanted fugitives, with a $10-million US reward offered for information leading to his arrest.

Clark, 34, was transferred to U.S. custody last month in an unprecedented Mexican extradition operation targeting cartel-linked figures. Heavily armed troops in pickup trucks descended on a shopping mall restaurant in the Guadalajara area for Clark’s arrest in October, according to social media video verified by CBC News.

Ryan Wedding is seen in two photos taken sometime in 2024 and distributed by U.S. investigators. (FBI)

Clark, who previously lived in the Toronto area, made his first appearance in U.S. federal court in Phoenix last week. He is scheduled to be transported to Los Angeles to stand trial on eight felony charges related to an alleged cocaine-trafficking conspiracy and four killings.

All four killings, including those of the couple in Caledon, occurred in Ontario but are being prosecuted in the United States since they were carried out in support of a criminal scheme with roots in California.

“This will be a not guilty plea,” Clark’s L.A.-based lawyer, Matthew Lombard, said in an email.

Property records and online posts suggest Clark sold his house in Burlington, Ont., and relocated to Mexico in 2022. In a photo distributed by U.S. prosecutors, he is seen wearing a City of Toronto lanyard. A municipal spokesperson declined to say whether Clark previously worked for the city.

Authorities have said Wedding and Clark’s alleged $1-billion US network — linked to Mexico’s notorious Sinaloa cartel — used stash houses in California to help move tons of cocaine and fentanyl throughout North America.

Details of the sprawling FBI investigation, outlined in court records, read like a Hollywood script.

U.S. federal agents accompanied a former drug trafficker to Toronto, where he wore a recording device to meet with suspected co-conspirators at an auto body shop. In California, investigators enlisted the National Guard to surveil a cocaine deal from an airship.

The RCMP said Wedding, 43, “continues to pose one of the largest organized crime threats to Canada, even as a fugitive.”

Jagtar Sidhu, left, his daughter Jaspreet and wife Harbhajan were all shot in a home in Caledon, Ont., in November 2023. The parents were killed, while Jaspreet suffered ‘life-altering injuries.’ U.S. authorities say the attack was ordered by Wedding and Clark, his second-in-command. (Submitted by Gurdit Sidhu)

Investigators said Wedding and Clark orchestrated the November 2023 killings of Jagtar and Harbhajan Sidhu, an Indian couple visiting their children in Caledon, northwest of Toronto. Their 28-year-old daughter, Jaspreet Kaur Sidhu, witnessed the rampage and was shot 13 times. She survived but suffered “life-altering injuries,” police said.

Authorities said the innocent family was mistakenly targeted over a stolen drug shipment. The gunman has not been identified.

In court documents, U.S. prosecutors allege Clark later sent a Toronto-based hitman known as “Mr. Perfect” a list of targets and arranged for him to attend “military training” in Mexico last year. Afterward, the alleged gunman, Malik Damion Cunningham, purportedly wrote to Clark: “I am what you call now ELITE thanks to you brother.”

Days later in a Niagara Falls, Ont., driveway, Cunningham allegedly fired a single shot to the head of a reputed cross-border drug trafficker for $100,000, “plus expenses.” Encrypted communications suggest Clark supplied the shooter with two Glock handguns and a 2023 Ford Explorer as a getaway vehicle, according to court documents.

A key FBI informant met with Wedding and Clark in a Mexico City Starbucks in January 2024, as part of the investigation. According to court documents, the man wore a wire and recorded Clark explaining he sends two to three tonnes of cocaine to Canada per month, including 600 kilograms to Alberta.

Wedding, Clark and 14 other alleged accomplices were indicted by a federal grand jury in California last year. Four co-defendants, including Cunningham, remain in custody in Ontario and face extradition to the U.S.

Four of the nine Canadian men charged alongside Wedding are shown in this courtroom sketch as they appeared by video link in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Toronto on Oct. 23, 2024. The U.S. is seeking their extradition. (Alexandra Newbould/CBC)

Another alleged accomplice, Gurpreet Singh, is scheduled to appear in a downtown Toronto court on Thursday as he asks to be released on bail, pending extradition. U.S. prosecutors have urged against Singh’s release, saying he poses a “substantial” flight risk.

“Investigators are aware that Wedding continues to traffic drugs while in hiding,” assistant U.S. attorneys Maria Jhai and Lyndsi Allsop wrote in a letter dated Feb. 21 and filed as an exhibit in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. “Wedding should not be granted access to an additional loyalist through the release of Singh on bail.”

The prosecutors allege Wedding had to intervene to secure Singh’s release last summer, after he was kidnapped by cartel members in Mexico over a $600,000 drug debt.

If you have a news tip related to this story, contact CBC News senior reporter Thomas Daigle by email: thomas.daigle@cbc.ca.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas is a CBC News reporter based in Toronto. In recent years, he has covered some of the biggest stories in the world, from the 2015 Paris attacks to the Tokyo Olympics and the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II. He’s reported from the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster, the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa and the Pope’s visit to Canada aimed at reconciliation with Indigenous people. Thomas can be reached at thomas.daigle@cbc.ca.

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