09/25/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/25/2025 14:03
ST. LOUIS - A Romanian national who has repeatedly entered the United States illegally on Thursday admitted costing big box stores across the country at least $161,000 with a sleight-of-hand fraud.
Adrian Stoica, 46, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in St. Louis to three counts of wire fraud and one count of illegal entry into the United States. He admitted conducting at least 170 transactions at stores in 20 states between November 2021 and March 2025.
After cashiers scanned merchandise, prepaid gift cards, and electronic money transfers for Stoica, he counted out cash into piles to trick cashiers into believing that he would be paying the full price. He collected the piles and then slipped bills from the bottom of the stack into his pocket, short-changing the stores by hundreds of dollars or more in each transaction. Stoica would then move on to a store in a different area.
Stoica's plea agreement mentions three transactions in Missouri. On Feb. 17, 2023, he shortchanged the cashier of a Chesterfield store by approximately $860. On Sept. 7, 2023, his scheme cost a store in O'Fallon, Missouri about $690. The next day, he cost a Fenton store about $660.
Stoica is scheduled to be sentenced on January 27. Wire fraud is punishable by up to 20 years in prison, a $250,000 fine or both prison and a fine. The illegal entry charge carries a prison term of up to two years and the same fine. Stoica will also be ordered to repay the money and will be deported.
Stoica illegally entered the country in 2016 via Arizona, around October 2018 via Texas and sometime before November 2021 via an unknown location. He was ordered removed from the country in May of 2018 and deported in February of 2020. Stoica has used the names Boeri Kvec, Borri Kvec, Boeri Stoica and Adrian Anghel, his plea agreement says.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations handled the case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Ladendorf is prosecuting the case.
Robert Patrick, Public Affairs Officer, [email protected].