Documentary Film To Be Made About Rita Crundwell

DIXON – An accounting professor and a retired forensic accountant started interviewing Dixon residents Monday morning.

Kelly Pope, an accounting professor at De-Paul University, and Tom Golden, a retired forensic accounting partner with Pricewaterhouse Coopers, are making a documentary film covering the events surrounding the arrest of Rita Crundwell.

The former Dixon comptroller was charged with federal wire fraud in connection with what prosecutors say is the misappropriation of more than $53 million in city funds.

Pope and Golden began filming at Crundwell’s arraignment hearing and began setting up to interview local residents between Monday, June 18.

Judge allows sale of Crundwell horses


ROCKFORD – As lawyers convened behind closed doors Friday, Rita Crundwell stared straight ahead as she waited for a decision on whether her 401 prime quarter horses would be sold before her case is resolved.

While the former Dixon comptroller and her attorneys already had agreed to the sale, there was a brief hold-up Friday as the federal prosecutors consulted with two attorneys representing some of the companies that have been taking care of the horses since Crundwell’s arrest.

The attorneys for the companies – Percott Company of Beloit, Wis., and a horse company and two veterinarians from Texas – want “assurances” that they would have chance to recoup some of their costs from sale proceeds.

Crundwell purchased the horses, along with other properties and assets, with city funds, according to federal prosecutors.

Crundwell, 59, is charged with one count of federal wire fraud as part of a scheme to misappropriate more than $53 million since 1990, according to prosecutors.

Crundwell will be back in court July 23 in both her civil and criminal case.

During a 30-minute hearing Friday, Magistrate Judge P. Michael Mahoney gave the U.S. Marshals Service the go-ahead to sell the horses, as well as 21 embryos, 13 saddles, and frozen stallion semen from eight horses.

Read the order allowing the sale.
Rita Crundwell Horse Order 12-cv-50153

A similar request to sell five of Crundwell’s properties and a $2.1 luxury motor home was granted late last month.

Marshals have been caring for the horses, properties and other assets seized from Crundwell after her April 17 arrest at City Hall.

Marshals did not return calls or emails seeking comment Friday.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Pedersen told Mahoney that selling the horses now will “be in the best interest of all parties involved.”

In a motion filed Thursday, Pedersen wrote that maintenance costs are “burdensome,” especially because some of the mares are pregnant or recently gave birth.

Prolonging the sale may also devalue the horses, Pedersen said.

Pedersen told Mahoney that it will take 60 to 90 days for marshals to bid out contracts to companies to conduct the sales.

All proceeds, minus costs incurred by the Marshals Service in setting up the sale, will be held in an escrow account managed by marshals until the case is resolved, Pedersen said.

Percott and Texas horse breeders Brock and Kristi Allen of Allen Equine, and veterinarians A. Barry Wood and Hartman Equine Reproduction Center, filed motions in late May to intervene in the civil suit.

In the motions, attorneys wrote that they have incurred substantial costs in caring for the horses, which have resulted in a lien of more than $150,000.

The attorneys argued that in the event the horses would be sold, they intend to make a claim from the proceeds to recover those costs.

Crundwell’s federal defender, Paul Gaziano, told Mahoney that he still is going over 17,000 pages of discovery provided by prosecutors, 6,000 of which were provided within the past month.

Mahoney told Gaziano to file any pretrial motions before Crundwell’s next court date.

After Friday’s hearing, Crundwell and her second attorney, Kristin Carpenter, walked briskly past a throng of reporters and into a small black car; a black trash bag had been placed over the license plate.

Crundwell’s horses soon up for sale?

DIXON – City and law enforcement officials met Tuesday with federal agents to make a “preliminary plan” in the event that a federal judge allows the sale of former Dixon comptroller Rita Crundwell’s nearly 400 horses, according to Lee County Sheriff John Varga.

No such order or motion had been filed as of late Tuesday.

“Obviously, no one can do anything without a court order,” Varga told Sauk Valley Media. “[The feds] wanted to give us a heads-up on what to expect.”

However, the U.S. Marshals Service, which was given the go-ahead last week in federal court to sell some of Crundwell’s assets, now said they will “delay” the sale of two of her properties until they receive further order from the court in regard to the horses.

Crundwell, 59, is charged with wire fraud. Prosecutors say she misappropriated more than $53 million in taxpayer money over two decades to pay for her horse operations and her “lavish lifestyle.”

According to court documents, Crundwell told federal agents that she used some city money to buy and maintain her horses.

Following her April 17 arrest, the U.S. Marshals Service took over five of Crundwell’s properties, which include her Brick Road home and horse ranch in Dixon, along with the horses scattered across the country.

On May 30, Judge Philip G. Reinhard granted an agreed motion between federal prosecutors and Crundwell to sell the properties and a $2.1 million 2009 Liberty Coach motor home.

Marshals Service spokeswoman Lynzey Donahue said in an email Tuesday that the sale of two of Crundwell’s Dixon properties which house multiple horses will be delayed, “as the Marshals Service has received no authority at this point to sell any of the approximately 400 horses believed to be owned by Crundwell.”

According to court documents, Crundwell has about 241 horses in Dixon.

Donahue and U.S. Attorney spokesman Randall Samborn have declined to say when or if a motion to sell the horses will be filed in federal court.

Varga, along with Dixon Mayor Jim Burke and Police Chief Danny Langloss, met with federal agents Tuesday to discuss a possible sale if prosecutors seek to seize the horses prior to a conviction.

Langloss did not want to comment on the meeting, and Burke could not be reached for comment.

Federal officials requested the meeting to talk about the logistics of a large public auction if a judge orders the horses to be sold, Varga said.

Varga said his department, with help from Dixon Police, would be in charge of traffic and crowd control, while marshals handle the auction.

Varga said there was no talk of when a sale could happen or how much the horses may sell for.

Marshals are using existing farm labor and have hired a contractor to manage the care of the horses, Donahue said Tuesday.

Marshals also are evaluating business operations to “ensure the livestock is maintained in the same or better condition as when they took custody and that the care of the animals meets industry practices,” Donahue said

Dixon Files Suit Against Auditors Over Embezzlement

The City of Dixon has filed a civil complaint against some of its auditors for not catching any of the alleged $53 million dollar embezzlement by the city’s former comptroller, Rita Crundwell.

Prosecutors say over a 20 year period, Crundwell diverted the money to an account she set up for personal use, spending it on luxury homes, jewelry, vehicles and a horse-breeding operation. She has pleaded not guilty to a federal charge of wire fraud and is awaiting trial.

Now, the city claims two Sterling accounting firms it hired to audit the books over the past five years, failed to catch the embezzlement. In the complaint, the city says Samuel S. Card, CPA, P.C. and Janis Card Company, LLC were negligent and wants to recoup the city’s losses.

In addition to the accounting firms, the city also named two banks–Fifth Third Bank and US Bank–as respondents in discovery. That means the city wants access to documents and other information to determine if anyone else should be named in the suit.

Company Caring for Crundwell’s Horses Wants to get Paid

BELOIT (WIFR) — A company that’s caring for some of Former Dixon Comptroller Rita Crundwell’s horses on her ranch in Beloit wants to be reimbursed for its troubles.

And that means it wants to stop a federal court from selling the animals. Purrcott Company says it has spent at least $150,000 boarding, training and caring for 60 horses.

Purrcott has intervened in the civil lawsuit against Crundwell to get its money back.

Judge will allow sale of certain Crundwell Horses

ROCKFORD – Several of former Dixon Comptroller Rita A. Crundwell’s properties and a luxury motor home may soon be on the market, a federal judge ruled Wednesday.

Judge Philip G. Reinhard granted an agreed motion between federal prosecutors and Crundwell to sell her properties at 1679 U.S. Route 52, Dixon; 1556 Red Brick Road, Dixon; 1403 Dutch Road, Dixon; 80 acres of land in Lee County; and 821 E. Fifth St., in Englewood, Fla.

A $2.1 million 2009 Liberty Coach motor home also will be sold.

In an order filed Wednesday, Reinhard directed the U.S. Marshals Service to sell the items and place the proceeds into the Marshals Seized Assets Deposit Fund until Crundwell’s criminal case is resolved.

Those properties, along with nearly 400 horses nationwide, were taken over by the Marshals Service following Crundwell’s April 17 arrest at City Hall.

Crundwell, 59, is free on a $4,500 recognizance bond and charged with one count of wire fraud, punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

Prosecutors say Crundwell misappropriated more than $53 million in taxpayer money over two decades to pay for her horse operations and her “lavish lifestyle.”

In two motions filed late Friday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Pedersen wrote that prosecutors want to sell the assets because “financial responsibilities relating to the subject properties are burdensome and the defendant does not have the means to meet the obligations.”

Pedersen wrote in the motions that Crundwell and her attorneys agree to the sale, although in doing so Crundwell is not admitting guilt.

Reinhard’s order will allow marshals to secure the property to prepare them for sale, as well as “assume any leases pertaining to the crops and farmland” at the Dutch Road and Lee County properties.

Marshals can deduct costs from the proceeds that are related to the sale and maintenance of the properties, Reinhard ordered.

Marshals Service spokeswoman Lynzey Donahue said Tuesday that once the judge approves prosecutors’ request to sell the property, an appraisal will be done.

From there, the agency will decide the best way to sell the property, whether it’s by auction, sealed bids, or sale by a broker under contract, Donahue said.

Judge allows sale of Dixon official’s assets

A federal judge has ruled several properties and a luxury motor home belonging to former Dixon comptroller Rita Crundwell can be sold.

Crundwell has pleaded not guilty to charges alleging she stole more than $53 million from the small northern Illinois city to pay for a lavish lifestyle and create a horse-breeding operation. A federal judge on Wednesday granted a motion to sell four properties in Illinois, one property in Florida and a $2.1 million motor home.

Both prosecutors and Crundwell agreed to the motion. Money from the sales will be put in a fund until Crundwell’s case in resolved.

It also appears Crundwell owns more horses than previously thought. An amended complaint claims Crundwell has admitted to owning between 350 and 400 horses. Prosecutors originally cited 311 horses.

They simply trusted her.

They simply trusted her.

Even after Rita Crundwell bought the $2.1 million motor home. Even after her herd of fine quarterhorses grew to more than 300 animals. Even after she bought semi-trailers worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. All in her role as the $80,000-per-year comptroller and treasurer of Dixon,Illinois.

The well-liked Crundwell,59,allegedly has stolen $53 million in more than 20 years from her hometown of Dixon,from a city budget that annually never has reached $10 million.

I was in Dixon the other day for another purpose,yet I had time to nose around a bit for a possible column,although folks I talked with at Books on First Street and a barbershop were a little reluctant to talk for the record.

There are lessons for all governments in the charges leveled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois. First,a little background.

Rita Humphrey graduated from Dixon High in 1971. She made the National Honor Society her senior year (one of 19 in a class of 331), was elected senior attendant in the 1970 homecoming court,and served as president of the Office Occupations Club. In high school, Rita interned with the Dixon city government and stayed on after graduation.

By 1984 she was selected by the city commissioners to become Dixon’s comptroller and treasurer.

Rita married a man named Crundwell and lived modestly throughout the 1980s. They divorced in 1986; no children. By the 1990s her participation in the quarterhorse world accelerated.

In 1990,Rita Crundwell also created a secret city account into which she allegedly began transferring city receipts,spending from the account to support her rapid rise up the rungs of the national quarterhorse world.

The attractive Crundwell became the best in the American Quarterhorse Association,by 2011 having won “best owner and exhibitor” eight years in a row.

All that takes big money in an activity known notoriously as a money pit. Horses are expensive. A horseman I know estimates that a fine equine specimen costs around $300 per month to feed,bed,see a veterinarian. That means more than a million dollars per year just for the upkeep of her 311 horses,not counting labor.

To feed her ever more expensive habit,which included frequent wining and dining of fellow quarterhorse aficionados in her Florida vacation home,and apparently $300,000-plus in jewelry paid for by the city,Rita’s rate of theft apparently increased. She is alleged to have stolen $3 million from the city in just the sixmonths prior to this March 31.

While Rita was away on vacation last year,city clerk Kathe Swanson filled in for her and discovered the secret account. She and Mayor James Burke took the evidence to the FBI,and kept their secret for sixmonths while the FBI investigated —and Rita continued her thievery.

Dixon is a picture postcard city of 16,000 nestled along both sides of the broad Rock River in Northern Illinois. A statue of favorite son Ronald Reagan graces one side of the riverwalk and that of A. Lincoln the other. Townsfolk fish beneath the Ronald Reagan Bridge,just a stone’s throw from downtown Dixon.

The citizens of Dixon seem angered and embarrassed,worried maybe that their fine community will be mocked for being led by rubes who can’t notice $53 million missing dollars. And fingers are being pointed.

The city manager of neighboring Sterling said he noticed negative fund balances in Dixon and raised red flags with unnamed Dixon officials. Outside accountants are admonishing the city’s auditors for not calling for a listing of city bank accounts.

This isn’t the first such major embezzlement in Illinois. In 1959,state auditor of public accounts Orville Hodge stole $1.5 million from state accounts; he spent eight years in the hoosegow for the privilege. Similar to Crundwell,he was at the time responsible for both the pre-audit and the post-audit.

What to do? Dixon already has instituted some redundancy in its financial system,requiring more than a single signature on checks,for example.

Now it needs to shed the commission form of government and replace it with the more professional council-manager form. In a commission government,five commissioners are elected to be both the executive and the legislative branches of city government. Each commissioner is given a portfolio to manage, such as finance,public works,and public safety.

Unfortunately,most elected commissioners are amateurs when it comes to their portfolios. As illustration,the previous finance commissioner for Dixon in 2011 praised Crundwell in his departure speech for watching vigilantly over every dollar of the taxpayers’ money.

As Dixon’s own Ronald Reagan said so famously,”Trust,but verify.”

More Rita Crundwell questions

Q: Who is the relative prosecutors say picked up the mail when Crundwell was on vacation? Why did the mayor and the commissioners allow that? Will this relative be arrested?

A: We haven’t been able to get confirmed who was picking up the mail.

Until this fall, when Kathe Swanson came to Mayor Jim Burke with the bank statement they said neither of them knew about, Burke said he didn’t know a relative was getting the mail.

The other commissioners I spoke to also said they were unaware of the practice. Commissioner Jeff Kuhn said that would have been a huge red flag had they known, but as part-time commissioners, they don’t deal with day-to-day things such as the mail.

The FBI will not comment on whether anyone else is being investigated or whether additional arrests are pending.

Q: The Dixon Municipal Band had its budget cut in half this past fall. Will any money recovered go toward restoring that program?

A: There’s no one place the money could or must go. If revenue figures end up being different than otherwise thought, those additional dollars would go through the same budgeting process that the city goes through each year.

But until the mayor and the commissioners know what kind of money we’re actually talking about, they said they don’t want to get into that.

If you would like to see the funds go toward the band, or toward anything else, you can always write a letter to the editor (you can find guidelines here: saukvalley.com/forms/letters/) or speak during a public comment period at the beginning of Dixon City Council meetings. Call Kathe Swanson at City Hall, 815-288-1485, for details.

Q: Is Dixon going to get a city manager?

A: In a letter to the council sent out Friday, the mayor proposed establishing a seven-member panel to discuss changes to Dixon’s government.

That would include deciding whether to hire a city manager as well as looking at the commission form of government. It will take a council vote to establish the citizen panel.

So, although the mayor himself is not advocating a particular form of government at this time, he is pursuing that line of thinking.

Q: What’s with the board with nails that was buried in the circular drive off Red Brick Road just past the buildings at Crundwell’s ranch?

A: From conversations with law enforcement officials, there appears to be nothing wrong with a security device like the one described by readers as long as its on private property.

But when I asked the U.S. Marshals Service, which is overseeing the horse ranch, about the board, I was told they were unaware of it and would look into it.

The board has since been removed, a marshals spokeswoman said, and an alternative security measure had been taken to prevent access to the ranch.

Q: Why are people who aren’t associated with Occupy Dixon showing up as members of the group on Facebook?

A: In 2010, Facebook changed the way they do groups. This change means that anyone who is invited to a group is automatically added as a member.

We’ve heard from a lot of people who are upset that they’ve been added to Facebook groups without their consent. If you are one of them, you can remove yourself by hovering over the group’s name in the left-hand column. A little icon that looks like a pencil will appear. Click that and choose Leave Group. You no longer will appear as a member in that group.

Dixon to delay investigating former comptroller

DIXON, Ill. (AP) – Officials in the northern Illinois city of Dixon are holding off on investigating a former financial officer accused of stealing more than $53 million in public money.

Dixon Mayor Jim Burke tells WHBF-TV the city is waiting until the FBI finishes its investigation of former comptroller Rita Crundwell.

Prosecutors say she used the money to fund 1 of the nation’s leading horse breeding operations and feed a lavish lifestyle that kept her outfitted with cars and jewelry.

She has pleaded not guilty to a single count of wire fraud.

Dixon’s mayor says an investigation now would cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars, on top of the millions Crundwell is accused of stealing.