The fact she played with these "rescued" animald was suspicious too. You're not supposed to treat them like pets, you want them to be releasable.
IIRC they were acquired from a farm, so you wouldn't be expecting rereleases even in a legitimate farm animal rescue. There's no real problem with playing with animals that were never meant to be releaseable in the first place, which farm animals never are. Even actual wildlife rescues will often be ok with socializing nonreleaseable animals and turning them into "pets".
Ths jackel puppies were the last thing i remember seeing info on, as they're pretty protected as i recall and it was found out she had 2 adults and was breeding them?
Breeding animals is generally a no-no for animal rescues*. There are, in rare circumstances, some rescues that will do it with specific animals, usually because they need a revenue stream, but it's very carefully curated (assuming we're talking about good rescues). I can't imagine that breeding jackals would bring in enough money to justify it, though. Space is
always at a premium in an animal rescue, so unless you can directly profit off of breeding, all you'd be doing is creating more mouths to feed. There's a reason why rescues will often sterilize animals whenever possible.
*not including, of course, rescues that are a part of a specific breeding program for endangered and vulnerable animals. It's not really that uncommon (especially for e.g. birds) for the parents to be in captivity because they're nonreleaseable (often due to life-altering injuries, say to the wings or beaks)
A fox rescue set up like Save A Fox
could work, but it would involve acquiring (possibly for free) fur farm foxes that were set to be culled due to having sub-standard pelts; there would be no point in breeding them because they they aren't bred to be pets and they can't give you any other kind of product (since their pelts suck). You'd be spaying and neutering those foxes as soon as you got them.
Even if the nastier allegations are untrue, Save A Fox just sounds like a petting zoo/exotic pet collection given a nonprofit coat of paint in an attempt to get free money. Weren't they not even registered as a nonprofit? An animal rescue doesn't
have to be registered depending on its scope of operations and where the money comes from (since animal rescue is an ENORMOUS money sink, if you're running one by yourself you need to be independently wealthy off some passive revenue stream before you even start, the one where I worked was paid for with vacation rentals), but it's always best to be upfront about this kind of thing...