"Give Me the Easiest One First." A Young US-Canadian Hitman Received "Military Training" in Mexico to Do Wedding's Dirty Work
”Socalj” for Borderland Beat
A small-time Toronto criminal was recruited by cartel figures, flown to Mexico for “military training,” and then sent to target a hit list of enemies of a cross-border drug ring led by a fugitive ex-Olympic snowboarder, a new set of new FBI documents claim.
According to authorities, it “all came to light by chance when a local Ontario police force conducted a traffic stop and seized a single white iPhone.”
The documents, being presented in a Toronto court, offer the clearest picture yet of the U.S. investigation into a murderous drug-trafficking organization allegedly run by former Canadian Olympian Ryan James Wedding and his second-in-command, Andrew Clark who is now in U.S. custody following his recent arrest in Mexico and extradition.
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US-Canadian trafficker Randy Fader was killed by Malik Cunningham, first on a long hit list supplied by Clark. |
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Niagara police soon made the connection from Cunningham’s arrest by York police, and the investigation into Wedding and Clark from the seized iPhone. They sought a search warrant on April 19, and, on April 25, 2024, they searched it to find hundreds of messages sent via the encrypted messaging apps Threema and Signal.
Among them was a photograph Cunningham allegedly sent two days after Fader’s murder. It showed a pistol and cash with the caption: “Good night!”
According to the court records, U.S. authorities only learned about Randy Fader’s murder on July 18, 2024.
Andrew Clark, who in 2020 described his occupation as elevator mechanic appears to have risen through the ranks in the world of Mexican drug cartels.
He was featured in a Toronto Life magazine article in April, 2020, highlighting how landlords were dealing with the first weeks of the pandemic. Clark said he and his wife had seven tenants in six properties, and that the couple was offering discounted rent for those impacted by COVID-19.
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Andrew Clark was the landlord of 6 properties in Toronto in 2020. |
“I wanted to show our tenants that I care about them, not just about them paying me,” he said in an email seen by CBC. “We are lucky I have a good job and we are very frugal.”
International Hit List
“Give me the easiest one first,” Cunningham allegedly told Clark over the encrypted messaging app Threema on March 18, 2024 adding that he needed a fake ID, a car and a place to dispose of the gun.
According to the messages, Fader was the first but not the only “enemy” on a hit list sent to Cunningham by Clark, who guided the young killer through the how-tos of international assassination, along with the potential perks. A U.S. indictment lists 17 aliases for Andrew Clark, including “The Dictator” and “El Niño Problemático.”
- A “realtor in Van for $200,000″
- Some “arabs worth a couple hundo each”
- A “mexi who owned a restaurant and his wife,”
- “Honcho for 150″
- Someone named “Donny” for $300,000
- A person in Dubai for “1 mil USD”
The messages also included details about how to:
- Use a GPS tracker on a target’s car
- How to use a target’s “bitch” to get close
- Tips on getting grenade launchers and firearms
- Planning contract killings
- Avoiding detection by law enforcement
- Procuring fake Mexican passports
At the time, Malik had only been out of jail for a month when Clark allegedly made the offer using the Signal app.
“We got lots of work bro,” one message read. “Brother I can’t wait to get to work.”
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Andrew Clark, now 34, was arrested in Jalisco, Mexico in 2024. |
Training in Mexico
According to the email/travel and GPS records taken from the iPhone, Cunningham flew from Toronto to Mexico for five days in March 2024 to complete a $100,000 course, which included training in “small arms long guns,” “medic” and “snipers.”
“I am what you call now ELITE thanks to you brother,” Cunningham allegedly wrote Clark from Mexico.
“Give me the easiest one first,” Cunningham allegedly said, adding he’d need a fake ID, a getaway car and a place to dispose of the gun.
It would be a “driveway job” — “Blow this guys top off.”
Connections Made in Prison
How exactly a young, 23-year old North York criminal could have come onto the radar of an alleged Canadian-Mexican Cartel figure remains unclear.
Cunningham’s criminal record includes convictions for offences committed in custody at the Toronto South jail. In January 2020, he allegedly attempted to start a riot by making and distributing weapons of opportunity.
Former Mexican crime journalist Luis H. Nájera describes prisons as “playgrounds” and “schools” for crime a place for people like Cunningham to forge connections in the criminal world.
It’s common for brokers of the drug trade to recruit local, lesser-known criminals to do their dirty work, explained Anna Sergi, a lecturer in criminology at Essex University in England who has profiled Ontario’s organized crime landscape.
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Olympic Snowboarder turned trafficker Ryan James Wedding. |
Young recruits are disposable and can be cheaper to hire than bringing someone in from Mexico, Nájera said. Their connections to high-level crime are also “loose,” he added, meaning it could be hard for authorities to trace who originally ordered an assassination.
The men have been charged under U.S. law because Fader’s killing was allegedly ordered in the furtherance of a U.S. criminal enterprise. A total of 10 Canadians were named in the sweeping U.S. indictment.
Source: https://www.borderlandbeat.com/2025/03/give-me-easiest-one-first-young-us.html
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