Crundwell indicted

60-count indictment returned against ex-comptroller

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“Why is the Sterling Police Department involved?” Dixon said. “Simple. I determined that there are too many people around Dixon who have some conspiracy theory.”

After the news conference, Dixon Police Chief Danny Langloss said although he was disappointed his agency couldn’t take the lead on the case, he understood why.

“I think there’s a lot of distrust,” Langloss said. “The bigger the government, the bigger the distrust is, and we’re confident in the way things are going to be handled moving forward.”

Dixon first asked the Illinois State Police, but it declined, citing a lack of personnel. That was the reason Dixon didn’t even ask the Lee County Sheriff’s Department. He said he already knew it was overwhelmed.

Morgan, an officer more than 19 years, said this was a significant investigation.

“On its face and with the dollar amounts that we’re talking, yes, it’s probably one of the larger cases that I’ll ever have to work on,” he said.

Federal prosecutors gave local investigators one document with eight lines of text on it, Dixon said.

They had to issue their own subpoenas, which is one of the reasons it took until now to come back with the indictment, he said.

“That (time period) is the window that I have been given to work with by the Department of Justice,” Dixon said.

“... It is our position, or is my position, that there were at least 60 times during that time frame in which money was taken from a city of Dixon account and deposited into the reserve sewer capital development account.”

That’s the RSCDA account Crundwell is accused of opening.

Each transfer translated into a count of theft of more than $100,000 of government property, a Class X felony punishable by 6 to 30 years in prison.

If Crundwell is convicted, the decision on whether those terms would be served consecutively or concurrently would be based on the sentencing structure, the length of time the activity took place and the interaction and relationship between the activities, Dixon said.

“That’s the general areas as it relates to our particular offense because there’s no conspiracy here,” he said. “There was nobody else involved. And frankly, had there been someone else involved, people would have known about it 20 years, 15 years ago.”

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