On March 28, a grand jury indicted Anne Goland (aka Anne Shumate Williams) on 13 embezzlement charges. She’s accused of taking money from the Peaceable Farm nonprofit.
Goland was arraigned on June 2 and pleaded not guilty to those charges.
The Somerset farm is the place where investigators found dozens of dead and neglected animals last fall.
The Orange County Sheriff's Office led a raid at Peaceable Farm on October 19, 2015, finding over a hundred horses and many cats and dogs on the property. Goland surrendered over 80 horses, 28 cats and 7 dogs over the course of a few days. More cats were later found inside a neglected house on the farm’s property.
At the time of the arrest, Sheriff Mark Amos said the farm “was one of the most horrendous sites” he’d seen in his years in law enforcement, adding that deputies found six dead horses, a dead donkey and some dogs, cats and chickens. He said nine horses had to be euthanized.
Goland is facing 27 charges of animal cruelty in connection to that raid. That trial was scheduled to begin on February 19, but was continued until a later date. She is now scheduled to be back in court on June 10.
Goland is scheduled to have a motions hearing in Orange County Circuit Court for the embezzlement charges on August 15.
(NBC 29 News - June 2, 2016)
Earlier:
- Seizure hearing Nov. 18 in Somerset animal cruelty case (Anne Shumate)
- Anne Shumate Williams aka Anne Goland, 57, charged in Orange animal cruelty case is out on bond
- Judge rules authorities justifiably seized sick horses from Anne Shumate
- Horse owner speaks out about neglect by Anne Shumate at Somerset farm
- Divorce Filings Shed Light on Peaceable Farm Owner's Finances (Anne Shumate Williams aka Anne Goland case)
- Virginia: Anne Goland aka Anne Shumate Williams charged with animal cruelty, indicted for embezzlement
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