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Dixon comptroller arrested in $30 million embezzlement scheme

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CHICAGO (MCT) — For years Rita Crundwell has kept an eye over virtually every dollar that passed through the small town of Dixon's coffers as city comptroller while also running one of the most successful horse farms in America.

On Tuesday FBI agents led Crundwell from City Hall in handcuffs on charges she misappropriated more than $30 million in city funds in just the last six years. Much of the money went to pay to operate the champion horse breeder's Meri-J Ranch, authorities alleged.

The size of the losses represents a staggering hit for the small northwest Illinois town with a budget of only about $8 million to $9 million a year and left residents bewildered.

"Nobody was watching the store," said Ron Pritchard, who attended high school with one of Crundwell's brothers. "We don't have the checks and balances."

In spite of a city salary of just $80,000 a year, Crundwell lived extravagantly, spending huge sums on her horse farms in Dixon and Beloit that raised champion quarter horses as well as $340,000 on jewelry since mid-2006 and $2.1 million to buy a luxury motor home fit for a rock star.

James Burke, mayor of the town of 15,000 less than an hour southwest of Rockford that is best known as the boyhood home of President Ronald Reagan, told the Tribune that townspeople figured her wealth came from her successful horse business.

"I guess people assumed she was making a ton of money in the horse business," he said.

In reality, she used a secret bank account to conceal her lavish spending on personal expenses, according to the mayor.

Crundwell's apparent downfall came because she took off four months a year — all but a month unpaid — to operate the horse business and travel to shows. During one of her stints off last October, an employee filling in for Crundwell asked the city's bank for all its statements and discovered a suspicious account that was the source of multiple six-figure transactions. Burke, Dixon's mayor since 1999, said he went to the FBI

"I was sick to my stomach, and I kept hoping that there really wasn't anything going on," the mayor said just hours after FBI agents arrested Crundwell and began to carry out search warrants at her farms in Dixon and Wisconsin.

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