US Islamic Groups Named 
in Hamas Funding Case
By JOSH GERSTEIN
The New York SUN
http://www.nysun.com/article/55778

Federal prosecutors have named three prominent Islamic organizations in America 
as participants in an alleged criminal conspiracy to support a Palestinian Arab 
terrorist group, Hamas.

Prosecutors applied the label of "unindicted co-conspirator" to the Council on 
American-Islamic Relations, the Islamic Society of North America, and the North 
American Islamic Trust in connection with a trial planned in Texas next month 
for five officials of a defunct charity, the Holy Land Foundation for Relief 
and Development.

While the foundation was charged in the case, which was filed in 2004, none of 
the other groups was. However, the co-conspirator designation could be a blow 
to the credibility of the national Islamic organizations, which often work 
hand-in-hand with government officials engaged in outreach to the Muslim 
community.

A court filing by the government last week listed the three prominent groups 
among about 300 individuals or entities named as co-conspirators. The document 
gave scant details, but prosecutors described CAIR as a present or past member 
of "the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood's Palestine Committee and/or its 
organizations." The government listed the Islamic Society of North America and 
the North American Islamic Trust as "entities who are and/or were members of 
the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood."

The secretary-general of the Islamic Society of North America, Muneer Fareed, 
said his group was surprised to be named in the Texas case. "I can tell you 
categorically that the current administration of ISNA, as well as its 
stakeholders, they have no connection to my knowledge with any Holy Land 
foundations," he said.

Mr. Fareed denied his group has any ties to Hamas, though he said it is 
difficult to police all 300 mosques under his umbrella. "We might have a kid 
whose dad was president of Hamas for all I know," he said. "How do you verify 
these things?"

The Islamic official expressed frustration at the lack of detail in the 
prosecution's filing. "Perhaps there's some evidence. I just don't really know 
what it is," he said.

Spokesmen for CAIR did not respond to messages seeking comment yesterday. 
Efforts to contact the North American Islamic Trust were unsuccessful.

The identification of the alleged co-conspirators could aid prosecutors when 
the Holy Land Foundation and five of its officials, Shukri Abu-Baker, Mohammad 
El-Mezain, Ghassan Elashi, Mufid Abdulqader, and Abdulraham Odeh, go to trial 
on July 16 in Dallas. Statements by and about co-conspirators are exempt from 
rules barring hearsay.
Judge A. Joe Fish will have to decide whether to accept the government's 
description of the alleged conspiracy.

The practice of publicly naming unindicted co-conspirators is frowned on by 
some in the legal community, chiefly because there is no trial or other 
mechanism for those named to challenge their designation. Justice Department 
guidelines discourage the public identification of unindicted co-conspirators 
by the government.

"In all public filings and proceedings, federal prosecutors should remain 
sensitive to the privacy and reputation interests of uncharged third-parties," 
the Justice Department's manual for prosecutors says. When co-conspirator lists 
have to be filed in court, prosecutors should seek to file them under seal, the 
guidelines say.

In practice, the lists are often made public. A list of co-conspirators was 
released in connection with the federal trial in 2005 of a former college 
professor, Sami Al-Arian, on terrorism support charges. However, when Enron 
executives went on trial last year, the list of alleged co-conspirators was 
kept under seal. Prosecutors on the Holy Land Foundation case could not be 
reached yesterday and did not respond to an e-mail.

The inclusion of the Islamic groups on the list of alleged conspirators could 
give ammunition to critics of the organizations. CAIR, in particular, has faced 
persistent claims that it is soft on terrorism. Critics note that several 
former CAIR officials have been convicted or deported after being charged with 
fraud, embargo violations, or aiding terrorist training. 

Spokesmen for the group have also raised eyebrows for offering generic 
denunciations of terrorism but refusing to condemn by name specific Islamic 
terrorist groups such as Hamas or Hezbollah.

In addition, one of the Holy Land Foundation defendants, Ghassan Elashi, 
founded CAIR's Texas chapter. CAIR's Washington office was also set up in 1994 
with $5,000 in seed money from the foundation, according to congressional 
testimony by a researcher into Islamic extremism, Steven Emerson.

Last year, Senator Boxer of California, a Democrat, withdrew an award she gave 
to an official at a local CAIR chapter. She said she had concerns about 
statements by some CAIR officials and about claims of financial links to 
terrorism. Many FBI officials meet regularly with CAIR representatives and 
clerics from the Islamic Society of North America.

A New York Times article published in March said unidentified government 
officials believed that the criticism of CAIR was unwarranted. A former FBI 
official, Michael Rolince, said yesterday that the co-conspirator designation 
might prompt CAIR to be more direct in denouncing terrorism but was no reason 
to cut off all contact with the group.
"People could say the same thing about the FBI. They're not all choirboys," he 
said. "We don't go into this with blinders on."

Separately, a reporter for the Dallas Morning News, Steve McGonigle, is 
fighting the prosecution's efforts to call him as a witness at the Holy Land 
Foundation trial.

In filing to quash the subpoena last week, Mr. McGonigle said prosecutors want 
to question him about an interview that he conducted in 1999 with the spiritual 
leader of Hamas, Sheikh Ahmad Yassin. Yassin, who was killed in an Israeli 
airstrike in 2004, denied any connection between Holy Land Foundation and Hamas.

However, Mr. McGonigle reported that records showed that the foundation 
sometimes singled out the families of Hamas "martyrs" for assistance.

Mr. McGonigle's lawyer said his client could be targeted by terrorists if he 
forced to testify. "A journalist who is perceived to have acted as an agent for 
the U.S. Government will almost inevitably be placed at a substantially greater 
risk when on assignment in the Middle East," the attorney, Paul Watler, wrote.

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