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City's ex-comptroller pleads guilty to stealing millions of dollars in public funds

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — Rita Crundwell, once the trusted comptroller of Dixon, Ill., entered her name into the record book of Illinois embezzlers Wednesday when she pleaded guilty to stealing tens of millions of dollars in public funds — a plea she made, her lawyer said, because she wanted to spare taxpayers the expense of a trial.

Crundwell's case has unfolded with spectacular excess over the last seven months after authorities charged she had long diverted city money to a secret bank account in her name. In recent years the thefts had grown bolder as she stole $100,000, $200,000, even $350,000 at a time, according to authorities. Eventually, her thefts exceeded the annual budgets for the police and fire departments combined.

But she made a fateful mistake, spending long periods away from City Hall as she traveled the country to compete in horse shows. She had become one of the nation's top breeders of quarter horses with the money she stole from her small town, best known as the boyhood home of President Ronald Reagan. The city clerk, filling in for Crundwell, discovered the secret account and informed the mayor, who tipped off law enforcement.

Last April FBI agents unceremoniously arrested Crundwell and whisked her out of City Hall in handcuffs. On Wednesday, she displayed no emotion as she quietly pleaded guilty in federal court to the staggering embezzlements — $53.7 million in all since late 1990.

Referring to Crundwell's "incredible avarice," Acting U.S. Attorney Gary Shapiro said he believed her scheme represented the largest theft of public funds in Illinois history.

"Apologies to Ronald Reagan, but public officials who manage their citizens' money need to trust if they must, but they need to verify," Shapiro told reporters outside the federal courthouse in Rockford, Ill. "There was, as far as we could tell, no verification here."

The federal conviction, coupled with felony theft charges still pending in Lee County, could mean Crundwell, 59, spends much of the rest of her life in prison.

Crundwell has been free on bond since shortly after her April arrest, but federal prosecutors on Wednesday sought to have her taken into custody, arguing she was a risk to flee because of her age and likely stiff prison sentence. But after Crundwell's lawyer said she didn't have the money to run or a place to go, U.S. District Judge Philip Reinhard allowed her to remain free on her own recognizance. He set sentencing for Feb. 14.

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