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Crundwell Pleads Not Guilty to Theft Charges

The mayor showed up early for Rita Crundwell’s arraignment, thinking the Lee County courtroom would be packed.

Instead,
only seven people attended the former comptroller’s Wednesday hearing,
including Mayor Jim Burke. The eight other spectators were members of
the media.

Though she entered a plea of not guilty, the answer could not be heard from the gallery.

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Crundwell,
59, is accused of stealing $53 million from the city of Dixon over a
20-year period. Prosecutors say she used the money to live lavishly and
to support a horse-breeding operation, which was run primarily from an
upscale ranch outside of town.

Her 401 horses, stabled in more than a dozen states, have been sold at auction by the U.S. Marshals Service.

Crundwell
entered the fourth-floor courtroom Wednesday with her head bent down.
The hearing lasted about five minutes, and she waived the reading of the
60 charges that have been filed against her in Lee County.

Each
count is a Class X felony, which carry possible sentences of six to 30
years each. The amounts specified in each count range from $100,000 to
$350,000, for a total of more than $11 million, which officials said
disappeared over a period of two years and four months.

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The state
charges are in addition to a federal charge of wire fraud, which is
pending. She has pleaded not guilty to the federal charge and is free on
bond.

A pretrial conference is scheduled for Dec. 19.

“I got here early, because I thought it’d be standing room only,” Burke said after the arraignment.

He
said it is possible many Dixon taxpayers declined to attend because
they plan to rely instead on media accounts of the hearing. He added,
“People in Dixon who really care … are looking forward, not back.”

Asked
how the city is recovering from the financial losses, Burke said, “Now
that we’ve got the outflow stopped, we’re doing much better.”

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Crundwell’s
ranch on Red Brick Road, just a few miles outside of town, appeared
barren Wednesday, compared to the flutter of activity of recent months
as the U.S. Marshals Service prepared her horse herd for auction.

At
her home about a mile from the ranch, a next-door neighbor’s yard
contains a campaign sign for County Attorney Henry S. Dixon — the man
prosecuting her.

After her arraignment, Crundwell was led out a rear door of the courtroom.

Click here for more from SaukValley.com including more pictures © John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

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