The Sentinel-Record

EDITORIAL ROUNDUP

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May 9 Chicago Tribune

Life is getting back to normal in Dixon, Illinois, victim of an especially disgusting scam, even in a state notorious for public corruption.

Working from a position of trust as comptrolle­r, Rita Crundwell embezzled a stunning $53.7 million over two decades to fund a lavish lifestyle, while her small, Lee County town (2020 population: 15,733) cut jobs, borrowed to the hilt and postponed essential upkeep. The town recovered part of the money from the bank and auditing firms that enabled Crundwell, as well as from the sale of horses and other luxury goods she bought with stolen funds.

At its meeting May 2, the Dixon City Council showed it is making progress despite the terrible crime committed against it, approving a budget, recognizin­g the work of the beautifica­tion preservati­on committee and addressing what we hope were routine bills.

It’s a far cry from the Crundwell years, when the town postponed replacemen­t of a fire truck at the same time its shameless bookkeeper was using stolen money to buy herself a $2 million motor home. Crundwell kept stealing right up to her arrest in 2012, at one point buying a $350,000 horse named Pizzazzy Lady with money supposedly earmarked for a Dixon sewer project.

With any luck, 2022 will be a banner year for bringing crooked public officials to justice in Illinois.

In July, former Chicago Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson, 11th, is scheduled to be sentenced for lying to federal bank regulators and filing false tax returns.

In September, the first batch of defendants in the Commonweal­th Edison swindle are set for trial. We hope a separate trial will come swiftly for ex-House Speaker Michael Madigan and an associate accused in the bribery scheme, in which ComEd admitted to giving Madigan cronies do-nothing jobs while obtaining lucrative state legislatio­n.

Ald. Edward Burke, 14th, and Ald. Carrie Austin, 34th, are likely to see their criminal cases advance this year toward final resolution­s. Another ex-alderman, Danny Solis, 25th, is expected to be a witness against Madigan and Burke.

We understand if you have trouble keeping the statuses straight: Thompson was found guilty, the ComEd defendants have pleaded not guilty, as have Madigan and his associate, as well as Burke and Austin. Solis has pleaded not guilty but admitted to crimes as he cooperated with the feds to gather evidence against his colleagues, and ex-Ald. Ricardo Munoz, 22nd, pleaded guilty and received a 13-month sentence in March.

What will it take to deter public officials in this state from using government offices to steal from taxpayers? Even longer prison sentences? …

As the pandemic unfolded in 2020, Crundwell filed for compassion­ate release from the federal prison near Peoria where she was being held. She was 67 at the time, and complained of high blood pressure, arthritis and other infirmitie­s common to older adults.

She described herself as a model inmate who had helped the feds recover hundreds of horses and other assets eventually used to pay back Dixon. She asked for release to her brother’s home on the outskirts of the same town she bilked, and the Bureau of Prisons now lists her at a halfway house in Downers Grove that actually farms out many of its inmates to “home confinemen­t” elsewhere.

The Bureau of Prisons does not provide details, but presumably Crundwell has returned to the scene of the crime, many years ahead of her time.

Three thoughts:

First, the pandemic posed a deadly threat to vulnerable inmates such as Crundwell and the feds had a duty to protect them from the virus, even if that meant temporaril­y releasing nonviolent offenders to home confinemen­t.

Second, the people of Dixon have every right to be angry about this compassion shown to a coldhearte­d liar who lived like a queen by gutting their town’s finances. As the judge said in imposing sentence, Crundwell showed “greater passion for the welfare of her horses than the people of Dixon who she represente­d.”

Third, when it’s deemed safe to do so, Crundwell should be returned to prison to complete the rest of her sentence. After abusing the public trust for more than 20 years, she should be required to serve at least 85% of an appropriat­e 235-month sentence. The federal system has no parole.

Corrupt public officials watching this high-profile case are no doubt betting that they, too, can get away with stealing for years, and then get off with a penalty that makes corruption worth the risk. Keep Crundwell behind bars, along with other crooks who abuse their offices and disgrace this state.

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