Orville Hodge
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Biography
Hodge was born in Anderson, Indiana, and from the age of four was raised in Granite City, Illinois. He and his family owned land and businesses in that area. In 1946, he married Margaret Coudy of Granite City with whom he had one son.
He was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives, where he served three terms. He was elected state auditor in 1952. He was a Republican.[1]
Embezzlement
His scheme started shortly after his election, when he forged accounting records and created a false paper trail to convince the Illinois General Assembly that his office was insolvent. The legislature gave his office a $525,000 emergency appropriation, which Hodge kept for himself.
With the funds that he stole from the state, Hodge purchased two private jets, 30 automobiles (including a Lincoln, four Cadillacs and a Rolls-Royce imported from Britain), and multiple properties in Florida and Illinois.
The embezzlement scheme was exposed by the Chicago Daily News, whose reporting team (including George Thiem) was awarded a 1957 Pulitzer Prize for their investigation.
Upon indictment, Hodge, who was facing the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison, agreed to forfeit all of his assets and pleaded guilty to 54 federal and state charges of bank fraud, fraud, embezzlement, conspiracy to defraud and forgery. He was sentenced to 12 to 15 years in prison.[2]
He was released in 1970 and went to work at his sister's hardware store, then as a car salesman and finally as a real estate agent in Granite City until his death at the age of 82 in Edwardsville, Illinois.[3][4]
Aftermath
The Hodge scandal played a role in the decision by Illinois lawmakers to abolish the office of the State Auditor in the new state constitution of 1970. The office was replaced by the new office of the Comptroller.
References
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External links
- History of the Illinois Comptroller's Office
- Time article, July 30, 1956
- bio and picture in 1953 official Illinois state handbook
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- Pages with script errors
- 1904 births
- 1986 deaths
- American people convicted of fraud
- American prisoners and detainees
- People from Granite City, Illinois
- Politicians from Anderson, Indiana
- Republican Party members of the Illinois House of Representatives
- Auditors of Public Accounts of Illinois
- Illinois politicians convicted of corruption
- Prisoners and detainees of Illinois
- 20th-century members of the Illinois General Assembly