Crundwell horses bring millions

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DIXON – Good I Will Be, aka Willy, definitely was the star of the show Sunday: The auction crowd was abuzz even before he stepped into the small ring.

“Willy really is a cool horse,” one auction-goer said.

It wasn’t long before they found out his true worth: After several minutes of intense bidding, the crowd erupted into cheers as the three-time world champion performance halter stallion sold for $775,000 to a Canadian woman.

That exceeded their expectations, said Tim Jennings, co-owner of Professional Auction Services Inc.

“It was just about the upper end of our range,” he said. “We thought it would be closer to $500,000 from a realistic standpoint, but figured if he did great, he would go for $750,000.”

Multiple doses of his semen brought $43,500 more.

Good I Will Be was among the 134 quarter horses belonging to former comptroller Rita Crundwell that sold Sunday at her Red Brick Road Ranch.

The horses and several batches of frozen semen from her prize breeding program brought more than $2.4 million. Tack sold before the auction netted nearly $100,000.

Only one horse didn’t sell, and auctioneers said Sunday that they have been approached by people interested in adopting those who don’t.

“It was as good as it possibly could be,” Jennings said after bidding ended around 6:30 p.m. He estimated that 3,000 to 4,000 people packed the ranch Sunday, twice what marshals expected.

The auction resumed Monday, when more tack, along with trucks, trailers, tractors, a breeding lab, and the rest of the performance and halter horses were sold.

Crundwell’s herd of prized quarter horses has been in the care of the U.S. Marshals Service since shortly after federal prosecutors indicted the 59-year-old on a single count of wire fraud.

Prosecutors say she misappropriated more than $53 million in city funds since 1990 to pay for her horse-breeding and -showing operations and the lavish lifestyle that accompanied her hobby.

She also is charged in Lee County with 60 counts of theft from Jan. 1, 2010, to April 17 totaling about $11.3 million. The state charges accuse her of transferring city money into a secret bank account; each count translates into a theft of more than $100,000 of government property, a felony punishable by 6 to 30 years in prison.

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