Two Romanian brothers living in the United States illegally have pleaded guilty to a fraud scheme that stole food benefits meant for vulnerable Americans.

The Justice Department announced the guilty pleas on July 2, 2026.

Marian Ovidiu Dumitru, 37, and Catalin Dumitru, 39, both appeared in federal court and pleaded guilty to wire fraud.

Both men are Romanian citizens residing unlawfully in the country.

According to the Justice Department, the case was announced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina and is part of the work of DOJ’s National Fraud Enforcement Division. Court records indicate that between July 2024 and August 2025, the two men were part of an identity theft ring that defrauded SNAP programs in New Jersey, Massachusetts, and other states of more than $760,000.

Prosecutors state that the ring used skimming devices at ATMs, fuel pumps, and other locations to steal EBT card data. This stolen information was then loaded onto counterfeit bank cards, gift cards, and other access devices.

The funds were intended for low-income families to put food on the table but were instead cashed out by the brothers through these counterfeit cards. Prosecutors report that the men used fraudulent cards at large membership warehouse clubs to purchase bulk coffee, candy, energy drinks, baby formula, and other goods—including more than $15,600 in purchases at a Gastonia, North Carolina club and more than $19,000 at another club in Pineville. Court documents tie the brothers to 15 or more counterfeit and unauthorized bank cards cloned with stolen SNAP EBT data, as well as blank magnetic-strip cards, and state that the scheme victimized more than 10 individuals and caused significant hardship.

Each brother faces a maximum statutory sentence of 20 years in prison. Sentencing has not yet been set.

The case supports President Trump’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, chaired by Vice President JD Vance, which aims to root out fraud, waste, and abuse in federal benefit programs.

Homeland Security Investigations, the USDA Office of Inspector General, the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, and state and local partners worked on the investigation.

The brothers were found guilty of illegally draining a food-aid program that helps vulnerable Americans, causing substantial harm to families who rely on these benefits.