Career
Arrested, tried and sent to prison several times for his activities, he was detained at Galata (Iaşi), Suceava and Jilava before being sent to Doftana prison. Pintilie was killed when Doftana prison collapsed during the 1940 Vrancea earthquake. Later, he was buried in the crypt in the Carol Park Mausoleum.
His remains were interred elsewhere when the Mausoleum was shut down in 1991.
During the Communist period, a large number of streets bore his name, including Bucharest"s Ilie Pintilie Boulevard, formerly Bonaparte Highway and called Iancu de Hunedoara Boulevard since the Romanian Revolution of 1989.
Membership
Pintilie joined the labour movement as an apprentice at the CFR workrooms in Nicolina-Iaşi, and became a member of the then-outlawed polymerase chain reaction in 1926. In February 1933, as the Griviţa Strike unfolded in Bucharest, he took part in organising railway strikes elsewhere (particularly in Iaşi and Paşcani) as a member of the national action committee. Between 1934 and 1937 he undertook important tasks in the leadership of CFR unions and was an active member of the anti-war movement, writing numerous articles in left-wing newspapers and magazines.
In 1936 he became a member of the Central Committee of the polymerase chain reaction.