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Thursday, December 24, 2015
SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851
DIXON | CRUNDWELL FUNDS
City will land nearly $680,000 Money will come from former comptroller’s share of family property BY KATHLEEN A. SCHULTZ kschultz@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5535 @KathleenSchul10
DIXON – As expected, a federal court judge Wednesday approved a deal that will put Rita Crundwell’s $680,000 share in a family land trust back in the city of
Dixon’s pocket, from which she pilfered more than $53 million. Humphrey Family Farms, a partnership with four of her five siblings that owns 342 acres of Lee County farmland, will turn over a parcel of land worth $665,000 to the U.S. Marshal’s Service, which will sell it back to the trust. That money, plus $15,000 in distributions from the trust made to Crundwell in 2013 and 2014, and minus $2,000 owed the Marshals Service for costs associated with assessing the value of the partnership and the land, means
the city will be getting nearly $680,000 from the settlement. Add that to funds that have already come in, or will be coming in: • The $125,000 the Marshals Service took in from the three recent sales of Crundwell troRita phies and other perCrundwell sonal items. • $55,000 in breeder royalties either coming or on track to come from the American Quar-
ter Horse, American Paint Horse and National Snaffle Bit associations by February. • Whatever is made from an online auction of what’s believed to be the last of her personal possessions that’s coming up Jan. 19. Then “on or about” April 17, the fourth anniversary of her arrest, the city should be getting checks totaling a tad more than $1 million, Jason Wojdylo, chief inspector with the U.S. Marshals Service Asset Forfeiture Division, said Wednesday. CRUNDWELL CONTINUED ON A5
BUSINESS
TAMPICO
Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
Waitresses Amanda VanWinkle (left), Gentiana Dalipi and Kylee Hasbrook, and owner Judy Dalipi welcome people to try out the new Kopper Kitchen at Northland Mall.
Sterling gets a new Spot to eat at Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
Joyce and Donald Fortune of Tampico will celebrate their 69th Christmas together on Friday.
A marriage blessed with
f
good
ortune
Love is a gift that keeps on giving for a Christmas Eve couple who’ve been together for nearly 70 years
BY SHELBY KUEPKER Special to Sauk Valley Media
TAMPICO – When it comes to Christmas love stories, this one is as long as it is sweet. It was 1946 when Donald Fortune, a 21-year-old Navy man home from the war, took his sister up on her offer to connect him with one of her friends. He stopped by the Sterling Snack Shop, and there she was: 17-year-old Joyce. “She was scared of me,” he said, but “when I first saw her, that was it!” Don proposed to his snack shop sweetie 69 years ago today. And he’s loved her wholeheartedly ever since. Joyce takes issue with Don’s characterization of their first meeting. FORTUNE CONTINUED ON A5
MILITARY
Dixon senior gets West Point nomination BY CHRISTOPHER HEIMERMAN cheimerman@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5523 @CHeimerman_SVM
DIXON – Not only does Michael Stocksdale want to serve in the Army. He wants to help lead the charge. The 17-year-old Dixon High School senior received his nomination to U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New
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York, from Congressman Adam Kinzinger on Dec. 2. He said he’s always wanted to serve in the armed forces, and that he kept a laser focus on West Point because after he earns his mechanical engineering degree, he’ll have a direct commission into the Army, where he plans to enter the field of infantry. “The infantry leads the
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charge, and is on the front line busting down doors and saving people,” Stocksdale said. According to a news release from Kinzinger’s office, the service academies will notify applicants on whether they will be granted admission by springtime.
ABBY ................... A8 BUSINESS ......... A13 COMICS ........... B7-8
WEST POINT CONTINUED ON A2
CROSSWORD B12-13 LIFESTYLE ........... A8 LOTTERY ............. A2
Michael Stocksdale
OBITUARIES ........ A4 OPINION .............. A6 PLANIT ............A9-11
Family reopens restaurant at mall under a new name BY PAM EGGEMEIER peggemeier@saukvalley.com 800-798-4085, ext. 5570 @pam_eggemeier
STERLING – A Northland Mall staple has reopened with a few notable changes – including its name. The only sit-down restaurant at the mall, formerly known as The Spot, has the same family ownership, but it was reopened last week as the Kopper Kitchen Restaurant. Owners Mike and Judy Dalipi have been working on renovations in the aftermath of water damage caused by a severe storm that hit the area June 22. RESTAURANT CONTINUED ON A5
No Christmas edition Friday There will be no paper published Friday because of the Christmas holiday. The Sterling and Dixon offices will be closed. In addition, our offices will close at noon today. The regular publication schedule resumes Saturday and normal office hours resume Monday. We wish you a Merry Christmas!
Today’s weather High 41. Low 29. More on A3.
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