Crime | Holy Land Foundation Charity Guilty on All Counts of Terror Funding By Neal Colgrass Posted Nov 24, 2008 5:39 PM CST Copied Zaira Abu-Baker, 25, right, holds her head as Noor Elashi, 22, right, speaks during an interview at a cafe in Richardson, Texas, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2008. (AP Photo/LM Otero) A Dallas jury found a Muslim charity and its ex-leaders guilty today on three dozen counts of terror funding, the Dallas Morning News reports. A retrial of the biggest terror financing case in US history, the case hinged on $12 million sent by the Holy Land Foundation to Hamas after the US declared it a terrorist organization in 1995. Analysts called the verdict a major victory for President Bush. Holy Land's defense attorney criticized the "show trial" and cases like it as a means to further Washington's "so-called 'war on terrorism.'" But analysts saw it as key to curbing funding to America's enemies. "A lot of people will only look at the win/lose of the jury verdict," one expert said. "I'm looking at it from the perspective of the flow of funding through charities to terrorists." Read These Next Baseball has a dirty secret hiding in plain sight. Number of missing in Texas floods revised in a good way. In Taiwan, a strange controversy over blood donations. In the early morning hours in East Hollywood, chaos. Report an error