The story of Dragos Sprinceana is not simply about trucking. It is about access, image and how credibility can be manufactured even when public records tell a far more troubling story.
According to the investigation, Sprinceana — a Romanian immigrant who built a large trucking operation — accumulated a long history of safety issues tied to companies under his control or influence. Federal records cited in the report show 150 crashes, 10 fatalities and $889,630 in unpaid federal fines, along with corporate filings that listed a deceased individual as a registered agent. Yet despite that record, Sprinceana appears to have gained entry into high-level political and social circles, including Mar-a-Lago.
The article follows that path in detail. Public records and social media archives show Sprinceana attending a private fundraiser with Congressman Matt Gaetz and appearing at political events while FMCSA was actively pursuing enforcement action against his company. The report is careful not to suggest wrongdoing by elected officials, noting that the carrier authority tied to his business was ultimately cancelled and out-of-service orders remained in place. Still, the overlap between regulatory action and political proximity forms a striking backdrop.
That access appears to have gone even further. On November 20, 2025, Sprinceana posted on Instagram about dining at Mar-a-Lago with Secret Service Director Sean Curran and then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. In his own description, the discussion centered on national security, the protection of the American people and the role of the United States globally.
What makes the moment significant is not just the setting, but the contrast. The investigation describes Sprinceana as a businessman whose company owed nearly $900,000 in unpaid federal safety fines, had a history of fatal crashes, held an Unsatisfactory safety rating and remained under unresolved federal out-of-service orders. Whether those in the room knew who they were sitting with, or did not, remains an open and uncomfortable question.
The report then shifts from political proximity to foreign influence concerns. By his own public statements, Sprinceana appears to have acted as an envoy to the Trump orbit on behalf of Romania, including meetings involving incoming National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and participation in a Romanian election-related visit alongside a US delegation. Yet, according to the article, no FARA registration has been found for any of the foreign government consulting work he publicly described.
The investigation also examines the nonprofit and corporate structures built around those activities. United Strategies of America Inc., formed in Florida as a not-for-profit corporation, is presented as part of the organizational layer supporting Sprinceana’s political and diplomatic positioning. Later filings removed his own name from the nonprofit and replaced it with Aaron Gentry, who is described in the report as a close corporate associate already tied to other Sprinceana-linked entities.
The article argues that this structure served as a kind of institutional cover, allowing influence-based activity to continue even after diplomatic relationships became publicly strained. It also raises questions about formal letters sent in March 2026 to Romanian President Nicusor Dan, letters that invoked the authority of the Federal Election Commission and referenced Trey Trainor even though Trainor had left the FEC months earlier.
Campaign finance adds another layer. Federal records cited in the investigation show that Sprinceana and his wife donated a combined $134,992 to candidates, PACs and party committees between 2020 and 2024. The report highlights donations to Matt Gaetz and to Michael Waltz’s campaign and PAC, including contributions made while federal fines against Sprinceana-linked operations remained unpaid. The article’s implication is not subtle: while regulators and carriers were waiting on obligations to be resolved, political money continued flowing.
The report also revisits the operating businesses Sprinceana later claimed to run, including Freight Transportation Group, Cargo 24/7, BOLT ELD and Olympus Design and Development. Promotional profiles described them as active, significant enterprises. Federal and state records, however, tell a more fragmented story.
Cargo 247 Inc. is described in the investigation as a freight broker, not a carrier, with no power units, no drivers and no inspection history. Freight Transportation Group Inc. has DOT registration and active vehicles on file, but its authority is listed as not authorized for interstate for-hire trucking. It also carried a vehicle out-of-service rate of 46.2% at the time of reporting, more than double the national average. The report adds that FTGI trucks were still seen pulling Gold Coast trailers even after Gold Coast was supposedly sold and placed out of service.
BOLT ELD, which Sprinceana publicly described as a nationwide hours-of-service compliance app, is indeed listed in FMCSA’s registered ELD device database. But the related Wyoming corporate filing lists another organizer, not Sprinceana.
The larger conclusion of the investigation is that this is not just a story about one operator. It is a case study in what happens when civil penalties go unpaid, enforcement remains incomplete and beneficial ownership can be obscured through multiple entities, mailbox addresses and legal distance.
For shippers, brokers, insurers and litigators, the article argues, the lesson is practical as much as legal. Safety ratings are public. Carrier histories are visible. Virtual office addresses, repeated entity creation and inconsistent operating records are all signals that should raise scrutiny. The report stops short of accusing Sprinceana of fraud in a criminal sense, noting that no court has convicted him of such a scheme. But it says the public record reveals a pattern of access, unpaid obligations and image-building serious enough to demand closer attention.





















