Muslim charity leaders on trial for allegedly aiding terrorists
   
  Please read the full story in
   
  http://www.usislam.org/itsajoke/holy_land_terror_finance_case.htm 
   
  also read : 
  1.) North Texas Muslims say Holy Land case is political
  2.) Holy Land terror finance case heading to court
  
 
  By DAVID KOENIG Associated Press Writer 
© 2007 The Associated Press 
        -->

  DALLAS — One of the most prominent anti-terror prosecutions of the past 
decade opened Monday as government lawyers and those representing leaders of a 
Muslim charity began quizzing potential jurors.
   
  The men on trial in federal district court aren't accused of being 
terrorists. Rather, they are charged with funneling millions of dollars to the 
militant group Hamas, which allegedly used some of the money to support the 
families of suicide bombers in the Middle East.
   
  Although the FBI investigated the men and the charity in the 1990s, the Bush 
administration raised the profile of the case since Sept. 11. President Bush 
announced the seizure of the charity's assets in a Rose Garden news conference 
three months later, in December 2001.
   
  Defense lawyers say the men and the charity, the Holy Land Foundation for 
Relief and Development, helped build hospitals and schools for Palestinians 
living under Israeli occupation but are not connected to Hamas.
   
  The defendants and their supporters claim the prosecution is based on 
anti-Arab bias.
  The trial before District Judge A. Joe Fish is expected to last several 
months. Prosecutors and defense lawyers are expected to lay out the case in 
opening statements next Monday.
   
  Just picking a jury is expected to take all this week. Lead prosecutor James 
T. Jacks asked Fish to drop a family counselor after she hedged about following 
the judge's instructions on the law. The judge said he would rule later.
  The defendants, all dressed in business suits, sat at tables arranged in a 
U-formation. Before the session started, they exchanged smiles and glanced 
occasionally at family members in the back row of the small courtroom.
  The defendants named in a 42-count indictment in 2004 are Holy Land, which 
federal authorities raided and shut down in December 2001; Shukri Abu Baker, 
the charity's president; Ghassan Elashi, its chairman; Abdulrahman Odeh; 
Mohammad El-Mezain; and Mufid Abdulqader. Two other men named in the indictment 
remain fugitives.
   
  The charges include supporting a foreign terrorist group, money laundering, 
conspiracy and filing false tax returns.
  According to the indictment, Holy Land raised more than $57 million from 1992 
to 2001 and sent about $36 million to individuals and groups tied to Hamas, 
including $12.4 million after President Clinton designated Hamas a terrorist 
group in 1995, which made contact with the group illegal.
   
  Elashi is in federal prison near Dallas on other convictions, including 
financial dealings with a top Hamas official. Baker, Odeh, El-Mezain and 
Abdulqader have been free while preparing for the trial, according to a 
prosecution spokeswoman.
   
  In a court filing in May that spelled out much of their case, prosecutors 
said Holy Land was sometimes called "The Fund" and was "an integral part of the 
Hamas social infrastructure." They said the organization was created "to 
support the Hamas agenda," which includes suicide bombings and other terrorist 
attacks.
   
  Prosecutors said documents seized in 2004 from the Virginia home of an 
unindicted co-conspirator showed that Elashi, Baker and El-Mezain were part of 
a committee coordinating support for Hamas in the United States. Prosecutors 
said the FBI monitored the committee's actions, including meetings to discuss 
raising money for Hamas.
   
  The investigation into Holy Land lasted more than a decade and included 
surveillance and wiretaps. Prosecution witnesses expected to testify include a 
retired Israeli Army colonel, a former Treasury Department official and expert 
on terrorism financing, and an unnamed person to discuss the structure of Hamas.
  Prosecutors indicated their evidence will include U.S. and foreign bank 
records, intercepted phone calls and faxes, and records seized by Israeli 
forces during military operations in the occupied West Bank.
   
  Defense attorneys said they will argue that most of the case against their 
clients is hearsay and flawed. They seized on summaries of FBI-wiretapped 
conversations that claimed Holy Land officials made anti-Semitic slurs. But the 
comments weren't found in the unabridged 13-page transcript.
   
  The defense plans to call its own experts, including scholars who have 
studied the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Prosecutors charged that defense 
lawyers are hoping to influence jurors with inflammatory testimony about 
Israel's operations against Palestinians.
   
  The political overtones of the case run deep.
  Parvez Ahmed, chairman of the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic 
Relations, said the Bush administration was trying to silence Muslim opposition 
to Israeli policy and stop aid to Palestinian children by closing Holy Land.
  "It has put a chill on First Amendment rights of Muslims in this country," 
Ahmed said. "It's caused Muslims to question, will donors be criminalized?"
   
  Baker, the former president of the charity, said in 2001 that Holy Land's 
critics were racists who considered every Palestinian a potential terrorist, 
"even if they happen to be a 4-year-old child whose father decided to blow up 
himself."
  In December of that year, Bush and then-Attorney General John Ashcroft 
announced the seizure of Holy Land's assets.
   
  "Those who do business with terror will do no business with the United States 
— or anywhere else the United States can reach," the president declared. "The 
net is closing. Today it just got tighter."
   
  Please read the ful story in
   
  http://www.usislam.org/itsajoke/holy_land_terror_finance_case.htm 


       
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