FBI Director Kash Patel has sparked fresh diplomatic tensions after he boasted on social media that elite U.S agents helped grab an alleged cocaine kingpin in a cross-border commando raid.
Ryan Wedding, 44, a Canadian former Olympic snowboarder now accused of running a vast cartel-linked cocaine pipeline, was captured in Mexico last week after years of allegedly hiding out under the protection of the Sinaloa Cartel.
Patel, 45, claimed on X last Friday that the bureau’s Hostage Rescue Team “executed with precision, discipline, and total professionalism alongside our Mexican partners to bring Ryan James Wedding back to face justice.”

The same day, Patel—dubbed ‘Keystone Kash’ for a string of law enforcement blunders—was ridiculed for a chaotic airport-tarmac news conference where he shouted over jet engines and bizarrely branded Wedding a “modern-day El Chapo.”
Patel’s very public announcements rubbed Mexican authorities the wrong way, however, because the raid was meant to be kept secret, according to The Wall Street Journal. Mexico bans foreign agents from taking part in operations on its soil, and its nationalist government is hypersensitive about U.S. incursions, the Journal reported, citing a U.S. official.
The country’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, 63, has attempted to contain the blowback. Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, she flatly denied U.S. involvement in the on-the-ground arrest and insisted American operatives face strict limits.

“I’m not going to get into a debate with the FBI director, nor do I want there to be a conflict,” she said, adding that U.S. officials had told Mexico it was a voluntary surrender.
She also pointed to an Instagram image purportedly showing Wedding standing outside the decommissioned U.S. Embassy with a caption saying he was turning himself in.
The post was captioned, “To the media and my followers: After seeking guarantees for a fair process, I have decided to voluntarily turn myself in to the authorities,” and thanked his wife and supporters for their messages, adding: “I am fully confident that the truth will come to light and set me free.”

However, Wedding’s lawyer, Anthony Colombo, has blown up that version.
“He was arrested, he didn’t surrender,” Colombo told reporters outside federal court in Santa Ana, California, noting that any unilateral U.S. snatch on foreign soil would understandably alarm the government involved.
Colombo also stressed that his client has pleaded not guilty to 17 federal counts, including murder.
The U.S. ambassador to Mexico, Ronald Johnson, has also tried to dampen the blunder by describing Wedding’s surrender as the result of “pressure applied by Mexican and U.S. law enforcement working in close coordination and cooperation,” according to the Journal.

The dispute comes as Trump has threatened land strikes against Mexican cartels and leaned on Sheinbaum to ramp up enforcement, slap tariffs on Chinese goods, and even put three planeloads of imprisoned drug bosses on U.S.-bound jets without formal extradition.
Inside the FBI, Patel’s latest gaffe is being treated as classic ‘Keystone Kash.’ The Beast began using the nickname—a dig that references the bumbling Keystone Cops of silent-movie fame—after he oversaw a string of avoidable fiascos and self-inflicted diplomatic wounds during his turbulent first year in the job.
Just one day before Patel’s Wedding whoopsie, it was reported that senior bureau officials complained he had blown a sensitive Five Eyes intelligence summit in the U.K. by demanding meetings at soccer games and on jet skis.
He also pushed to post a group photo from Windsor Castle that British partners had explicitly ordered him not to share, one senior FBI official told The New York Times.

That episode followed a drumbeat of reporting about Patel allegedly treating a $60 million FBI jet as his personal shuttle to watch his country-singer girlfriend perform, and deploying FBI SWAT protection details around her shows.
Conservative media allies have also turned on him over high-profile blunders, including his premature claims of a suspect in custody for the killing of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk and a Brown University shooting investigation that saw a “person of interest” paraded, then quietly released.
The Daily Beast has contacted the FBI, the White House, Mexico’s Department of Foreign Affairs, and Colombo for comment.
The post Keystone Kash Accidentally Sets Off Crisis With Social Media Blab appeared first on The Daily Beast.




