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Ex-comptroller Crundwell sentenced to 19 years

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Rita Crundwell, right, the former comptroller of Dixon, Ill., who pleaded guilty in November 2012 to wire fraud, admitting she stole nearly $54 million from the city of Dixon, arrives with her attorney Kristin Carpenter on Thursday at the federal courthouse for her sentencing in Rockford. (Alex T. Paschal – Sauk Valley Media)

ROCKFORD – Saying she is “truly sorry,” a tearful Rita Crundwell was sentenced this morning to 19 years and 7 months in federal prison for pulling off what may be the biggest municipal theft in U.S. history.

The sentence is just 5 months shy of the maximum 20 years allowed. She will be on supervised release for 3 years after her sentence is served.

The disgraced former comptroller also must repay the city of Dixon the nearly $54 million she stole to pay for, among other things, her nationally renowned herd of 400 quarter horses, a ranch in Dixon, a vacation home in Florida, luxury cars and a motor home, furs, jewelry and all the trappings of a wealthy lifestyle – an unlikely feat, since the sale of most of her assets so far has brought only about $11 million.

The 60-year-old must serve at least 16 and a half years, or 85 percent of her sentence.

U.S. District Court Judge Philip Reinhard said she will serve her time in a prison near Beloit, Wis., where her longtime boyfriend lives. Waseca (Minn.) Federal Correctional Institute, a low-security federal women’s prison, is about 300 miles from Beloit.

Crundwell pleaded guilty in November to wire fraud, admitting to stealing the staggering total over more than 20 years.

A presentence report that took into account the nature of her crime and the extent of her cooperation, among other things, recommended she be sentenced to between 12 and a half and 16 years.

Her public defender asked the judge for the lower end of those guidelines, while prosecutors sought the high end, up to the full 20.

Reinhard said the theft of $53.7 million was “enough aggravation” to warrant the lengthy sentence.

A number of Dixon officials and employees testified Thursday morning, including Mayor Jim Burke, who has known Crundwell since 1967, when she was in high school working part-time for the city. He asked the judge to give Crundwell the maximum sentence, and told her he hoped “she finds purpose in her life.”

Crundwell, who had been comptroller since May 1983, opened a bank account she called the Reserve Sewer Capital Development Account, or RSCDA, at First Bank South, now Fifth Third Bank, in December 1990.

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