UPDATE: We reached out directly to the Attorney General’s office, who only referred us to the press release detailing Andrea Gause’s indictment in September.

The woman thought to have stolen money from a fund created to help the ailing victims of the Boston Marathon bombings was arraigned in Suffolk Superior Court today where she entered a plea of not guilty. Andrea Gause, 26, of Troy, NY stands accused of stealing $480,000 from The One Fund.

Facing charges of larceny over $250 and gross fraud, Gause plead not guilty claiming she sustained injuries in the dual bombings that rocked the Boylston Street finish line as well as the peace of mind of Boston residents and city dwellers nationwide. Investigators were able to deduce that Gause wasn’t even in Boston on that fateful April afternoon.

Attorney General Martha Coakley has noted that all of the money allocated inappropriately by Gause has since been returned to the fund. She remains behind bars, held on $200,000 bail.

A timeline for the forthcoming court proceedings pegs a bail review for Gause on October 22, followed swiftly by a pre-trial conference on October 28. Gause is thought to have worked with an accomplice, per video surveillance that showed her withdrawing One Fund money from an Albany bank. The investigation will continue into probing the co-conspirator’s identity.

The news of the One Fund comes just after State prosecutors were issued a default warrant to charge Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, one of two accused of detonating the dual explosives, with “murder, attempted armed robbery, four counts of armed assault with intent to murder, four counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping, armed robbery, unlawful possession of a firearm, possession of a large capacity feeding device, and possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number” for his role in the cold-blooded death of MIT police officer Sean Collier, and a gun fight that erupted on the usually tame streets of Watertown, MA.