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US jury divided in Islamic Charity case
22 Oct 2007 16:10:56 GMT
Source: Reuters
DALLAS, Oct 22 (Reuters) - A Dallas jury found one defendant not guilty on all charges against him on Monday but failed to reach a decision on many of the counts against other defendants in a complex trial involving a U.S. Islamic charity accused of illegally channeling money to the militant Palestinian group Hamas.

U.S. District Judge A. Joe Fish sent the jurors back one more time to see if they could reach unanimous agreement after some of the jurors signaled the decisions he read were not theirs, confusing matters further in a trial has dragged on for three months, including 19 days of jury deliberations.

Only one defendant, Mufid Abdulqader, was found not guilty on all counts, in his case 32, in the verdict read by the judge.

Two of the accused were found not guilty of most counts with the jury hung on some. The jury said it could not reach any verdict against the Holy Land Foundation itself and two of the defendants.

Supporters of the defendants have said the case highlights the unfair scrutiny that U.S. Muslims have been subjected to since the Sept. 11 attacks and that it criminalizes legitimate charitable activities which are central to the Islamic faith.
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An Israeli soldier gestures from atop a tank near the Sufa crossing, after operating in the southern Gaza Strip, October 31, 2007. Since quitting Gaza in 2005, Israel has mounted regular commando raids and air strikes on rocket crews but the salvoes have not ceased. Two such operations on Tuesday killed at least four Hamas policemen and wounded six Palestinian civilians. REUTERS/Amir Cohen (ISRAEL)



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