Dianne Bedford / Woofy Acres Court Update: May 13 Hearing Delayed as Nevada Animal Crisis Raises New Questions
Dianne Bedford / Woofy Acres Court Update: May 13 Hearing Delayed as Nevada Animal Crisis Raises New Questions
People v. Dianne Denise Bedford
Case No. FVI25002174
The criminal case against Dianne Denise Bedford, associated with Woofy Acres, returned to court on May 13, 2026, in San Bernardino County.
This hearing came just days after the People filed a request to revoke Bedford’s O.R. status. O.R. stands for “own recognizance,” meaning release from custody without having to remain in jail while the case is pending, subject to court-ordered conditions.
Bedford is currently facing felony animal cruelty charges in California, and new concerns have emerged involving a property in Nye County, Nevada, where animals connected to this situation have been kept.
The court did not decide the motion on May 13. Instead, the motion was continued.
The next hearing is currently listed for:
June 2, 2026
8:30 AM
Department R20
Rancho Cucamonga
Pre-Preliminary Hearing
Also listed: Motion to Revoke O.R. Status
This is not over, but the May 13 hearing made one thing very clear: if the court is going to act on alleged violations, the evidentiary record needs to be stronger.
What the court record shows
The San Bernardino County court portal currently lists the case as:
Case Number: FVI25002174
Case Name: The People of the State of California v. Dianne Denise Bedford
Case Type: Felony
Filing Date: July 11, 2025
Case Status: Active
Court Location: Victorville
Judicial Officer: Zahara Arredondo
Next Hearing: June 2, 2026, at 8:30 AM, Department R20, Rancho Cucamonga
The court record also shows that on May 8, 2026, the People filed a request “to revoke def o/r status.”
On May 13, 2026, the case returned to court for a pre-preliminary hearing. The hearing result is listed as:
Continued Party’s motion
The May 13 filings also show:
• Bedford waived her right to a preliminary hearing within 10 court days
• Time was waived under the applicable preliminary hearing timeline
• The defense filed a brief regarding O.R. release
• A confidential document was filed
The June 2 hearing entry also references:
Motion to Revoke O.R.
TWT: 8/3
BIWIH $50K
Based on the courtroom update we received, the judge appeared to acknowledge that the motion raised a technical violation issue, but indicated that the evidence presented was not yet strong enough for the court to act on the alleged violation at that time.
This does not mean there is no concern.
It means the court has not yet been given a strong enough evidentiary record to revoke or change Bedford’s release status.
Witnesses, documentation, and public reporting are incredibly important.
What the DA has already charged
The San Bernardino County District Attorney previously announced that Dianne Denise Bedford was charged in case FVI25002174 with 37 counts related to animal cruelty and neglect.
According to the DA’s public announcement, Bedford was alleged to have had 114 dogs on her Piñon Hills property without adequate food, water, or veterinary care.
The charges include:
• 7 felony counts under Penal Code 597(b)
• 9 misdemeanor counts under Penal Code 597(b)
• 21 counts under Penal Code 597.1(a)
Bedford was arrested on August 7, 2025. Bail was set at $250,000, which she posted.
San Bernardino County District Attorney announcement:
https://da.sbcounty.gov/2025/08/13/pinon-hills-woman-charged-with-animal-cruelty/
Beezy’s Rescue has also maintained a public evidence database for this case. That evidence page includes public-records documentation, nonprofit records, case timeline information, kennel card data, and outcome tracking for dogs connected to the July 2024 seizure.
Beezy’s Rescue Woofy Acres Evidence Database:
https://beezysrescue.org/resources/woofy-acres-evidence-database/
This is why we continue to say the same thing: this case cannot be treated as a small paperwork problem, a misunderstanding, or a simple hoarding case without broader consequences.
Dogs died.
Many of them.
The surviving animals, the public, the shelters, the rescuers, the witnesses, and every person who tried to get help deserve a full accounting.
What happened after the last court update
After the March 26 hearing, the court portal showed that the previously scheduled April 28 preliminary hearing had been vacated, and a new pre-preliminary hearing was set for May 13, 2026, in Rancho Cucamonga.
Our previous court update:
https://beezysrescue.org/woofy-acres-dianne-bedford-march-26-hearing-update/
Now, after the May 13 hearing, the case remains active and unresolved.
The motion to revoke or alter Bedford’s release status was not decided. It was continued.
The defense has been given more time, discovery remains part of the issue, and the District Attorney’s Office will need to strengthen the record if it expects the court to take action based on alleged violations.
That is frustrating.
But it is also clarifying.
If there is evidence that Bedford crossed state lines, accessed animals, handled animals, transported animals, directed others to move animals, arranged care for animals, removed animals from a property, visited the Nevada property, or continued operating through associates, that evidence needs to be preserved and provided to the proper agencies.
Not gossip.
Not rumors.
Evidence.
Photos. Videos. Text messages. Emails. Witness statements. Transport records. Shelter paperwork. Rescue transfer records. Adoption records. Veterinary records. Property access records. Call logs. Screenshots with dates. Anything that helps establish a timeline.
The next hearing is June 2.
The record needs to be stronger.
The Nevada property: how we found out
Recently, a neighbor in Nye County, Nevada contacted Beezy’s Rescue and Kennel Eviction Rescue after seeing our public posts about Dianne Bedford and Woofy Acres.
That neighbor had reportedly been trying to get help for animals on the Nevada property for a long time. After seeing the California case information online, they recognized the connection and reached out.
That is how this Nevada property came to our attention.
Kennel Eviction Rescue has been in direct communication with the neighbor and has been working to help save dogs and other animals from what was becoming a life-or-death situation. Beezy’s Rescue has also been assisting with advocacy, documentation, coordination, and placement outreach.
Local animal control and the sheriff’s office have been contacted and involved. This has not been a situation where rescuers simply showed up without trying to work through appropriate channels.
The reality is that animals were on the property.
The caretaker had died.
The animals were at risk.
Animals reportedly did not have reliable access to food or water. Dogs, puppies, pigs, and other animals needed immediate help.
Advocates were not going to stand by and let animals starve while everyone waited for agencies to decide whose responsibility it was.
Why the Nevada evidence matters
The Nevada situation matters for several reasons.
First, Bedford is currently facing an active felony animal cruelty case in California.
Second, release status, bail conditions, and animal-access restrictions matter only if they are monitored, enforced, and taken seriously.
Third, if Bedford has been accessing animals, directing animal care, moving animals, visiting animals, or involving herself with animals through another property or through other people, that is directly relevant to public safety, animal safety, and the court’s ability to evaluate risk.
Fourth, a neighbor has reported seeing Bedford on the Nevada property and has a photograph of Bedford on that property with a dog.
That is not a small detail.
If true, it raises urgent questions:
How long had Bedford been visiting the property?
What agencies knew?
What investigators did or did not follow up on?
Were animals moved?
Are additional animals still unaccounted for?
Did other people or organizations help place animals with Bedford, Woofy Acres, or her associates after concerns were already known?
Were animals transferred across state lines?
Were animals hidden, relocated, or handled through intermediaries?
These questions need answers.
And those answers require evidence.
This is exactly why witnesses must be taken seriously
We have spoken with the District Attorney’s Office multiple times. We have been told that the office is speaking with people who contact them.
But from our perspective, the process has not felt as responsive, coordinated, or evidence-forward as it needs to be.
Witnesses, rescuers, neighbors, former fosters, former adopters, shelter volunteers, transporters, and advocates who are trying to provide relevant information should not be treated as annoyances.
They should be treated as people who may hold critical pieces of the timeline that prosecutors need.
The Nevada property was not found because investigators publicly warned the rescue community.
It was found because a neighbor saw our advocacy posts online, recognized the connection, and contacted rescuers.
That should concern everyone.
If Bedford had been visiting that property for over a year, then the obvious question is:
Where was the investigation?
Why did it take a neighbor, online advocates, and rescue volunteers to connect these dots?
Why were animals still sitting there without adequate care?
Why were rescuers left scrambling to prevent more suffering?
Why did the evidentiary burden fall so heavily on the public, advocates, neighbors, and rescue groups?
These are fair questions.
The motion being continued is not the end of the issue
A continued motion is not a denial of reality.
It is a procedural moment.
It means the court has not yet acted.
It does not mean the public should stop paying attention.
It does not mean witnesses should stay quiet.
It does not mean the Nevada property is irrelevant.
It does not mean animals are safe.
And it does not mean the concern was unfounded.
What it means is that the People need a stronger, clearer, better-supported record if they want the court to revoke or alter Bedford’s release status.
That is exactly why we are asking anyone with evidence to come forward now.
What we are asking for now
We are asking the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office and all relevant agencies to do the following:
- Fully investigate the Nevada property connection.
- Follow up with every witness who has evidence of Bedford being on that property, crossing state lines, accessing animals, transporting animals, directing others to move animals, visiting animals, or communicating about animals.
- Coordinate with Nevada authorities, including animal control and law enforcement, to determine whether additional animal cruelty, neglect, abandonment, or release-condition-related violations occurred.
- Determine whether any animals are missing, moved, hidden, transferred, or unaccounted for.
- Investigate whether any rescue organization, shelter, transporter, foster, adopter, boarding provider, veterinary provider, or intermediary transferred animals to Bedford, Woofy Acres, or her associates.
- Review any documented evidence showing Bedford with animals, near animals, directing animal care, or controlling animal placement after the California case was filed.
- Treat witnesses and rescuers as partners in evidence gathering, not as problems to manage.
- Pursue release restrictions, bail restrictions, animal-access restrictions, ownership prohibitions, restitution, and accountability to the fullest extent supported by the evidence.
If you have evidence, come forward now
If you have any evidence of Dianne Bedford with animals, near animals, transporting animals, arranging animal care, collecting animals, moving animals, visiting the Nevada property, crossing state lines, or directing others to handle animals, please come forward.
This includes evidence from California, Nevada, or anywhere else.
We are especially asking for:
• Photos or videos of Bedford with animals
• Photos or videos of Bedford on or near the Nevada property
• Photos or videos of Bedford transporting animals
• Text messages, emails, voicemails, or social media messages
• Rescue transfer records
• Shelter pull records
• Foster or adoption paperwork
• Veterinary records
• Boarding records
• Transport records
• Donation or payment records connected to animal care
• Witness statements
• Screenshots with dates
• Property access documentation
• Proof that an animal was given, transferred, fostered, boarded, transported, or otherwise placed with Dianne Bedford, Woofy Acres, or an associate
If you are a rescue organization, shelter volunteer, transporter, former adopter, former foster, boarding facility, veterinary provider, donor, neighbor, or former associate with records, please preserve everything.
Do not delete messages.
Do not crop screenshots in a way that removes dates, names, phone numbers, usernames, email addresses, timestamps, or context.
Do not rely on memory alone if you have documentation.
Do not assume someone else already reported it.
The evidence matters now.
If your rescue transferred animals to Bedford, Woofy Acres, or an associate
If you have evidence that a rescue organization pulled a dog from Los Angeles City shelters, Los Angeles County shelters, or any other shelter system and then transferred that animal to Dianne Bedford, Woofy Acres, or someone acting on her behalf, we want to know.
This does not mean every person involved knew what was happening.
Rescue networks can be messy, informal, and trust-based. Animals are often moved through multiple hands before the full picture becomes clear.
The paper trail is important evidence.
The agencies handling this case need to understand how animals moved, who transferred them, who accepted them, who transported them, who paid for care, who had custody, and who had control.
If animals were routed through other organizations or individuals before ending up with Bedford, that needs to be documented.
If you pulled from a shelter and transferred to Woofy Acres, document it.
If you transported for Bedford, document it.
If you fostered, boarded, adopted, returned, or rehomed an animal connected to Woofy Acres, document it.
If you know animals were sent to Nevada, document it.
If you know animals were moved after the California seizure or after charges were filed, document it.
This information may matter to the case.
The Nevada animals still need help
This is not just about court.
There are still animals who need safe placement, medical care, food, water, transport, rescue backing, and responsible long-term outcomes.
The Nevada property situation is dire. Animals were left in an unstable situation after the caretaker died. Dogs and other animals were depending on people to intervene. Rescuers and neighbors have been trying to prevent further suffering while also working with local authorities.
We need the public to understand that rescue work in these cases is not clean or easy.
It is messy.
It is urgent.
It is emotionally brutal.
It often happens because agencies are delayed, overwhelmed, under-resourced, jurisdictionally limited, or unwilling to act quickly enough.
But when animals are without food, water, or care, the moral obligation is immediate.
We will not apologize for helping animals survive.
Why public advocacy matters
The public found this connection because people shared information.
A neighbor saw public posts.
That neighbor recognized the name.
That neighbor contacted rescuers.
Rescuers began coordinating, documenting, and trying to get animals out.
That is why public advocacy matters.
It is not about harassment. It is not about spectacle. It is not about internet outrage.
It is about making sure evidence does not disappear, animals do not vanish, and agencies understand that the public is watching.
When systems fail to connect the dots, the community often does.
That does not replace law enforcement.
It does not replace prosecution.
It does not replace the court.
But it can help make sure the right evidence reaches the right people before it is too late.
Our evidence page
Beezy’s Rescue maintains a public evidence database for the Woofy Acres / Dianne Bedford case.
That page includes case information, public records, nonprofit filing details, court updates, dog outcome tracking, and resources for witnesses, victims, advocates, journalists, and agencies.
Please review and share the evidence page here:
Beezy’s Rescue Woofy Acres Evidence Database:
https://beezysrescue.org/resources/woofy-acres-evidence-database/
We will continue updating the evidence page as records are confirmed.
Contact Victim and Witness Services
If you are a material witness, a person with records, a former foster, adopter, rescuer, donor, transporter, neighbor, boarding provider, veterinary provider, shelter worker, shelter volunteer, or someone otherwise impacted by this case, you can contact San Bernardino County Victim and Witness Services.
The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Bureau of Victim Services states that it helps victims and witnesses understand the criminal justice process, receive case notifications, obtain support, and connect with victim advocates.
San Bernardino County Victim Services:
https://sbcountyda.org/victim-services/
When contacting them, reference:
People v. Dianne Denise Bedford
Case No. FVI25002174
Briefly explain who you are, what evidence or records you have, and why you believe the information is relevant.
You can also preserve copies of your documentation and provide them to the appropriate investigating agencies, prosecutors, or victim/witness representatives.
This case is not over.
The May 13 hearing did not resolve the motion to revoke or alter Bedford’s release status.
It showed that the prosecution needs a stronger evidentiary record if the court is going to act on alleged violations.
So let’s build the record.
If you know something, come forward.
If you saw something, document it.
If you transferred an animal, say so.
If you transported an animal, say so.
If you fostered or adopted an animal connected to Woofy Acres, say so.
If you have records, preserve them.
If you are a witness, do not assume someone else already reported it.
And if you are an agency involved in this case, listen to the people who have been sounding the alarm.
The public is not asking for shortcuts. We are asking for a serious investigation, meaningful enforcement, and accountability that reflects the scale of harm.
Ninety-plus dogs are dead after the California seizure.
More animals were found in crisis in Nevada.
A neighbor has reported seeing Bedford on the Nevada property with a dog.
The People filed a request to revoke Bedford’s O.R. status.
The court continued the motion.
The next hearing is June 2.
The record needs to be stronger.
The public has every reason to demand that no more animals disappear into the same pattern.
We will continue documenting.
We will continue sharing verified information.
We will continue supporting the animals left behind.
We will continue asking for witnesses to come forward.
And we will continue asking the same question:
How many warnings does one case need before every agency involved treats it like the emergency it is?











