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Dixon official who took $53M seeks leniency

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CHICAGO – An attorney for a former small-town Illinois bookkeeper who stole a staggering $53 million in public funds is arguing for a lenient prison sentence, saying the woman has cooperated with investigators since her arrest and must endure “disrepute and shame” for the rest of her life.

For more than two decades, Rita Crundwell, the former comptroller in the northern Illinois city of Dixon, used the stolen money to fund her nationally renowned horse-breeding operation and luxurious tastes.

She’s scheduled to be sentenced Feb. 14 for what federal prosecutors have called one of the most significant abuses of public trust ever in corruption-plagued Illinois.

– Wire report

She faces up to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty in November to a felony count of wire fraud.

Crundwell, who had sole control of the city’s finances for years, siphoned funds into a secret bank account and hid the scheme by producing fictitious invoices for things like municipal sewer projects.

Sentencing guidelines that take into account Crundwell’s acceptance of responsibility and lack of prior criminal history put the possible punishment at between 13 and 16 years in prison. Public defender Paul Gaziano is arguing for a sentence at the lower end of that range.

Prosecutors say it should be above the guidelines and have argued for closer to 20 years, though they haven’t specified exactly what sentence they would like. They cite the length of the scheme, the elaborate steps Crundwell took to hide her trail and the hardships her theft caused to the people of Dixon and the local government, which lost the public’s confidence and had to make sharp cutbacks because of budget shortfalls.

In a pre-sentencing memorandum filed Tuesday, Gaziano wrote, “Ms. Crundwell recognizes that the people of Dixon feel betrayed, bewildered and vengeful for her crime.”

Gaziano cited Crundwell’s age, saying a long sentence for the 60-year-old woman would amount to life in prison. He said the court should also take into consideration that Crundwell’s crime did not involve violence and that since her arrest in April 2012 she has cooperated with authorities in selling off assets to go toward restitution, including her more than 400 prized quarter horses.

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