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Comptroller sentenced to almost 20 years in city fraud case

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Several Dixon city officials—including the police chief and a city commissioner—were called to the witness stand Thursday to detail how Crundwell’s thefts crippled the city budget, delaying projects like repaving streets and replacing police radios, and led to fears of layoffs.

Crundwell blamed the weak economy and late state payments for the cash crunch, according to prosecutors. “If you knew where the money tree was, I’d be willing to get you a dump truck,” Mike Stichter, superintendent of the city’s Street Department, testified she once told him.

Reading from a prepared statement in court, Mayor James Burke quoted Shakespeare’s “Richard III” in explaining Crundwell’s motiviation. “My horse! My horse! My kingdom for a horse!”

“Rita Crundwell saw firsthand the penalty the city was paying for financing her high-flying, 20-plus years,” he said in reference to the budget woes caused by her thievery.

For the first time, authorities suggested that Crundwell’s thefts may have gone back as far as 1988, earlier than alleged in the charges. Crundwell, who started working for the city’s finance department in 1970 while still in high school, siphoned money from the city’s Sister City program’s bank account, taking at least $25,000 over two years, prosecutors said.

According to her guilty plea, the fraud began in December 1990 when Crundwell opened a secret city bank account. By the next month she started funneling money from various city accounts into the Capital Development Fund account, then into her secret account.

The thefts grew bolder over time, peaking at $5.8 million in 2008 alone.

She used the taxpayer money to amass a quarter-horse operation that was the envy of the industry. She owned about 400 horses by the time of her arrest. She also had purchased a sprawling ranch in Dixon, homes in Illinois and Florida, a luxury motor home, hundreds of thousands of dollars in jewelry and almost $250,000 in bank accounts.

Even the judge pondered aloud in court Thursday how the fraud went on undetected for so long, but Crundwell had complete control over the city’s purse strings and even collected the mail so her secret account wouldn’t be discovered. Another city official uncovered the account while Crundwell had taken extended time off to attend horse competitions around the country.

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