Born in Cobia, Dâmbovița County, in 1947, he moved to Făgăraș, where he worked as a lathe machinist at Nitramonia company, also joining the Romanian Communist Party.
On 2 February 1990, after a four-day trial, Dincă was sentenced to life in prison, confiscation of all property and payment of court charges.
[1] Nicknamed "Te leagă" (He will tie you up) because of his eagerness to have people arrested, and Balconetti (because, while he was mayor of Bucharest he forbade people to modify their balconies),[3] he had two daughters, both of whom used to be Arabic language teachers for the Securitate officers, who have settled in the United States after the Romanian Revolution of 1989.
[2][3] One of his daughters, Doina, married in the early 1980s future controversial businessman Gabriel Popoviciu [ro].
[4] Dincă died on January 9, 2007, and was buried at the Ghencea Military Cemetery in Bucharest.