A notorious Twin Cities counterfeiter and scam artist has lengthened his rap sheet, this time charged with paying for an Eagan restaurant with a phony $400,000 cashier's check and then draining the business of money.
Edward Stahlmann, 37, of St. Paul, was charged Monday in Dakota County District Court with three counts of check forgery in connection with his agreement to buy Wyatt's Twisted Americana off Cliff Lake Drive in January.
Stahlmann was imprisoned in Faribault 3 ½ weeks ago after his conviction in Ramsey County for passing a fake $26,000 cashier's check to a title services company in White Bear Lake.
The complaint in the earlier case noted that Stahlmann has more than 20 convictions dating to 2004 for crimes that include theft, swindling, passing forged checks, filing fraudulent tax returns, possessing or passing counterfeit checks, and two convictions for impersonating a police officer.
Court records do not list an attorney for Stahlmann, who has another six months in prison for his conviction in Ramsey County.
According to the Dakota County complaint:
Wyatt's told police that Stahlmann used what he presented as a Bank of America cashier's check to buy the business, and the money was deposited by the seller on Jan. 9 in its U.S. Bank account.
Stahlmann soon "assumed control of the business, its accounts, and proceeds," although the deal had not been finalized.