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Muslim Charity Convicted in Terrorism Financing Trial

posted by nsymmonds | 5:12pm Monday November 24, 2008

DALLAS – A Muslim charity and five of its former leaders were convicted Monday of funneling millions of dollars to the Palestinian militant group Hamas, finally handing the government a signature victory in its fight against terrorism funding.
U.S. District Judge Jorge A. Solis announced the guilty verdicts on all 108 counts on the eighth day of deliberations in the retrial of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, once the nation’s largest Muslim charity. It was the biggest terrorism financing case since the attacks of Sept. 11.
The convictions follow the collapse of Holy Land’s first trial last year and defeats in other cases the government tried to build. President George W. Bush had personally announced the freezing of Holy Land’s assets in 2001, calling the action “another step in the war on terrorism.”
After Monday’s verdict, family members showed little visible reaction until the jury left. Several women sobbed loudly.
“My dad’s not a criminal!” one nearly inconsolable woman said loudly. Court personnel told the family to calm her down, and as family members rushed her out of the courtroom, she said, “They treated him like an animal.”
Ghassan Elashi, Holy Land’s former chairman, and Shukri Abu-Baker, the chief executive, were convicted of a combined 69 counts, including supporting a specially designated terrorist, money laundering and tax fraud.
Mufid Abdulqader and Abdulrahman Odeh were convicted of three counts of conspiracy, and Mohammed El-Mezain was convicted of one count of conspiracy to support a terrorist organization. Holy Land itself was convicted of all 32 counts.
A sentencing date hasn’t been scheduled.
Holy Land was accused of giving more than $12 million to support Hamas. The seven-week retrial ran about as long as the original, which ended in October 2007 when a judge declared a mistrial on most charges.
Holy Land wasn’t accused of violence. Rather, the government said the Richardson, Texas-based charity financed schools, hospitals and social welfare programs controlled by Hamas in areas ravaged by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The U.S. designated Hamas a terrorist organization in 1995 and again in 1997, making contributions to the group illegal. Government officials raided Holy Land’s headquarters in December 2001 and shut it down.
Prosecutors labeled Holy Land’s benefactors – called zakat committees – as terrorist recruiting pools. The charities, the government argued, spread Hamas’ violent ideology and generated loyalty and support among Palestinians.
It was a “womb to the tomb” cycle, prosecutor Barry Jonas told jurors during closing arguments last week.
Holy Land supporters told a different story. They accused the government of politicizing the case as part of its war on terrorism, while attorneys for the foundation said Holy Land’s mission was philanthropy and providing much-needed aid to the Middle East.
They reminded jurors that none of the zakat committees are designated by the U.S. as terrorist fronts, and that Holy Land also donated to causes elsewhere, including helping victims of the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995.
“No one here is engaging in acts of terrorism,” Theresa Duncan, attorney for former Holy Land chief executive Shukri Abu Baker, said during closing arguments.
A chaotic courtroom scene ended last year’s original trial, which lasted nearly two months and kept jurors deliberating for 19 days. But they deadlocked on many counts, and when a judge polled the panel about other verdicts, some disavowed their vote.
The confusing finish led U.S. District Judge A. Joe Fish to declare a mistrial, and leaders of the defunct charity rushed outside to celebrate.
Observers last year panned the government for presenting a bloated case too complicated for jurors to follow. Prosecutors responded this year by dropping nearly 60 charges in the trial and tightening their narrative to jurors, even offering a kind of road map to help the panel follow the money.
But nearly 15 boxes of evidence wheeled into court on a flatbed still impressed the size of the case, as did the more than one hour that Solis needed to read aloud the indictment.
Associated Press – November 24, 2008
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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Comments read comments(7)
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pagansister

posted November 24, 2008 at 8:09 pm


This might slow Hamas’s funding for a little while, but unfortunately others will/are continuing to fund them.



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nnmns

posted November 24, 2008 at 11:12 pm


“the government said the Richardson, Texas-based charity financed schools, hospitals and social welfare programs controlled by Hamas in areas ravaged by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”
Boy, we sure wouldn’t want anyone financing schools, hospitals or social welfare!
I wonder how one could donate money to those people, who desperately need help, without being attacked by our government.
How to make ourselves look even worse to the Middle East.



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Your Name

posted November 24, 2008 at 11:45 pm


I think this whole trial was a farce. Holy Land Foundations major “crime” seems to be providing relief to Palestinians suffering under Israeli oppression. Shame on our Government!



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Confessoressa

posted November 25, 2008 at 3:43 am


This is so sad. I hope Obama finds a way for more peace in this region and makes it possible to provide aid without being labeled a terrorist supporter.



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jestrfyl

posted November 25, 2008 at 10:44 am


I am immediately suspicious when a truck load of paper is presented for evidence. If the case cannot be made simply and without excessive complications, it is likely shaky. This case seems very suspicious. Even the government admits the money went for humanitarian causes. We will never win the war militarily – only through humanitarian efforts. I think this was a stunt to legitimize the Scarecro-W/Tinman-C agenda and has nothing to do with real concern for people. I am sure this will go to higher courts – and the current administration will be called to taks for this abuse of the judicial system and the people accused.



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Henrietta22

posted November 25, 2008 at 11:58 am


I thought the same thing as most of you did. These people help people from their church just as all churches do. Were they to leave frinds and loved-ones over there just to die and decay because a war is being held between Palestine and Israel? They even helped the OK victims after their attack. Was every juror allowed to read all the papers on the wagon? Of course they weren’t. I hope the Supreme Court gets this. It must be awful to see your father being convicted of helping people.



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cknuck

posted November 25, 2008 at 6:07 pm


Sure the Hamas used 12 million for schools and the fact that it is the “biggest” terrorist funding oh we’ll just overlook that and the fact that they may have recruiting in mind, they are such nice terrorist. The whole “from the cradle to the grave” concept completely escapes some naive American suburbanites.



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