Piecing Crundwell together

An honor roll student, a horse enthusiast, a longtime official

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Rita Crundwell in 1971.
Rita Crundwell in 1971.
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DIXON – Rita Crundwell has had plenty of money the last 6 years – or, at least, that’s the case the FBI is making.

The former Dixon city comptroller lived well beyond her salary, according to authorities. She is accused of misappropriating $30 million in city funds.

When did she start coming upon big money?

Crundwell, now 59, started as comptroller in 1983. Through the rest of the 1980s, she appeared to have lived relatively modestly, according documents and newspaper clippings.

By the late 1990s, her participation in the quarter horse industry had picked up. Afterward, she launched big-dollar construction projects on her properties.

Over the past week, Sauk Valley Media has examined Crundwell’s life as told by acquaintances, public documents, and newspaper stories. But missing pieces to the puzzle remain.

Crundwell, who was fired this week, could not be reached for comment, and her longtime boyfriend, Jim McKillips, would not speak about her for this story.

Family members also have refused to discuss Crundwell, and few others acknowledge links to her.

An honor roll student

Rita Humphrey was a good student – something that newspaper clips from 1971 show.

That was the future Rita Crundwell’s last year at Dixon High School.

Shortly before her graduation, the National Honor Society inducted Crundwell. She walked the line with 338 other seniors in June 1971, the largest graduating class in Dixon’s history at that point.

Of that class, 140 made the honor roll. Only 19, including Humphrey, reached the top level of the honor roll.

She was also popular. A yearbook photo shows that she was an attendant in the homecoming court her senior year.

That year, the Telegraph ran photos of graduates, with captions that included their parents’ names and the students’ post-graduation plans.

Crundwell’s entry listed her mother, Caroline Humphrey. Crundwell planned to attend Sauk Valley Community College.

As a youth, Crundwell, a later champion in national quarter horse competitions, took part in 4-H contests. But her record then was no indicator of future success.

Newspaper clippings don’t indicate whether she even competed in the livestock competitions in the 1970 Lee County Fair.

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