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Reverse Engineering Ahmed Mohamed’s Clock… and Ourselves.

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I have something in common with Ahmed Mohamed: as a youngster, I was also an electronics enthusiast. At his age and even earlier, I frequently took apart electronic devices – anything from my own toys, to broken things around the house, and even that dirty garbage-picked black and white TV my parents dragged home that they knew I’d have a blast playing with (I did.) I’d try and troubleshoot, repair, or sometimes just disassemble things and salvage components for future projects. I’d try and imagine how all those bits and pieces, lengths of wires, mazes of conductive circuit board traces all came together to produce an image, or a sound, or some other useful function. I wanted to know how it all worked.

Without dating myself – fast forward a bunch of years, and I’m the same way. I’ve even picked up an engineering degree over the course of those years. I don’t have to only imagine how things work anymore, I have a pretty good understanding now. When shopping for electronic devices, my first instinct is to see if there’s a way to build one myself (and, I frequently do!) When something of mine breaks, I don’t send it back, I take it as a personal challenge to get it working again. If I fail, I still salvage useful parts – they might come in handy to fix something else later. This aspect of myself – being both methodical, and curious – hasn’t changed a bit over the years.

High resolution police photo of Ahmed's clock. Click to enlarge.

High resolution police photo of Ahmed’s clock. Click to enlarge.

So, this story about a 14 year old boy in Texas that was arrested on suspicion of creating a bomb hoax (who, apparently just wanted to show off his latest electronics project to his teachers) that has blown up (no pun intended) all over the news and social media, caught my attention immediately. Not because of his race, or his religion, the seeming absurdity of the situation, the emotionally charged photo of a young boy in a NASA t-shirt being led off in hand cuffs, the hash tags, the presidential response… no, none of that. I’m an electronics geek. I was interested in the clock! I wanted to figure out what he had come up with.

I found the highest resolution photograph of the clock I could. Instantly, I was disappointed. Somewhere in all of this – there has indeed been a hoax. Ahmed Mohamed didn’t invent his own alarm clock. He didn’t even build a clock. Now, before I go on and get accused of attacking a 14 year old kid who’s already been through enough, let me explain my purpose. I don’t want to just dissect the clock. I want to dissect our reaction as a society to the situation. Part of that is the knee-jerk responses we’re all so quick to make without facts. So, before you scroll down and leave me angry comments, please continue to the end (or not – prove my point, and miss the point, entirely!)

For starters, one glance at the printed circuit board in the photo, and I knew we were looking at mid-to-late 1970s vintage electronics. Surely you’ve seen a modern circuit board, with metallic traces leading all over to the various components like an electronic spider’s web. You’ll notice right away the highly accurate spacing, straightness of the lines, consistency of the patterns. That’s because we design things on computers nowadays, and computers assist in routing these lines. Take a look at the board in Ahmed’s clock. It almost looks hand-drawn, right? That’s because it probably was. Computer aided design was in its infancy in the 70s. This is how simple, low cost items (like an alarm clock) were designed. Today, even a budding beginner is going to get some computer aided assistance – in fact they’ll probably start there, learning by simulating designs before building them. You can even simulate or lay out a board with free apps on your phone or tablet. A modern hobbyist usually wouldn’t be bothered with the outdated design techniques. There’s also silk screening on the board. An “M” logo, “C-94” (probably, a part number – C might even stand for “clock”), and what looks like an American flag. More about that in a minute. Point for now being, a hobbyist wouldn’t silk screen logos and part numbers on their home made creation. It’s pretty safe to say already we’re looking at ’70s tech, mass produced in a factory.

So I turned to eBay, searching for vintage alarm clocks. It only took a minute to locate Ahmed’s clock. See this eBay listing, up at the time of this writing. Amhed’s clock was invented, and built, by Micronta, a Radio Shack subsidary. Catalog number 63 756.

Image property of eBay seller curiosities_curios

Image property of eBay seller curiosities_curios

The shape and design is a dead give away. The large screen. The buttons on the front laid out horizontally would have been on a separate board – a large snooze button, four control buttons, and two switches to turn the alarm on and off, and choose two brightness levels. A second board inside would have contained the actual “brains” of the unit. The clock features a 9v battery back-up, and a switch on the rear allows the owner to choose between 12 and 24 hour time. (Features like a battery back-up, and a 24 hour time selection seems awful superfluous for a hobby project, don’t you think?) Oh, and about that “M” logo on the circuit board mentioned above? Micronta.

clock5

clock6For one last bit of confirmation, I located the pencil box Ahmed used for his project. During this video interview he again claims it was his “invention” and that he “made” the device – but the important thing at the moment, at 1:13, we see him showing the pencil box on his computer screen. Here it is on Amazon, where it’s clearly labeled as being 8.25 inches wide. Our eBay seller also conveniently took a photo of the clock next to a ruler to show it’s scale – about 8 inches wide. The dimensions all line up perfectly.

So there you have it folks, Ahmed Mohamad did not invent, nor build a clock. He took apart an existing clock, and transplanted the guts into a pencil box, and claimed it was his own creation. It all seems really fishy to me.

If we accept the story about “inventing” an alarm clock is made up, as I think I’ve made a pretty good case for, it’s fair to wonder what other parts of the story might be made up, not reported factually by the media, or at least, exaggerated.

I refer back again to this YouTube video interview with Ahmed. He explains that he closed up the box with a piece of cord because he didn’t want it to look suspicious. I’m curious, why would “looking suspicious” have even crossed his mind before this whole event unfolded, if he was truly showing off a hobby project, something so innocuous as an alarm clock. Why did he choose a pencil box, one that looks like a miniature briefcase no less, as an enclosure for a clock? It’s awful hard to see the clock with the case closed. On the other hand, with the case open, it’s awful dangerous to have an exposed power transformer sitting near the snooze button (unless, perhaps his invention was to stop serial-snooze-button pressers by giving them a dangerous electrical shock!)

So again, I’m pointing all this out – about the specifics of the clock – not to pick on the poor kid. I’m picking on us, our culture, and our media. I don’t even care about the clock itself at this point.

If we stop and think – was it really such a ridiculous reaction from the teacher and the police in the first place? How many school shootings and incidents of violence have we had, where we hear afterwards “this could have been prevented, if only we paid more attention to the signs!” Teachers are taught to be suspicious and vigilant. Ahmed wasn’t accused of making a bomb – he was accused of making a look-alike, a hoax. And be honest with yourself, a big red digital display with a bunch of loose wires in a brief-case looking box is awful like a Hollywood-style representation of a bomb. Everyone jumped to play the race and religion cards and try and paint the teachers and police as idiots and bigots, but in my mind, they were probably acting responsibly and erring on the side of caution to protect the rest of their students, just in case. “This wouldn’t have happened if Ahmed were white,” they say. We’re supposed to be sensitive to school violence, but apparently religious and racial sensitivity trumps that. At least we have another clue about how the sensitivity and moral outrage pecking order lies.

Because, is it possible, that maybe, just maybe, this was actually a hoax bomb? A silly prank that was taken the wrong way? That the media then ran with, and everyone else got carried away? Maybe there wasn’t even any racial or religious bias on the parts of the teachers and police.

I don’t know any of these things. But I’m intellectually mature enough to admit I don’t know, and to also be OK with that. I don’t feel a need to take the first exist to conclusionville. But I do like to find facts where I can, and prefer to let them lead me to conclusions, rather than a knee jerk judgement based on a headline or sound bite.

I think the whole event – and our collective response, with everybody up to the President chiming in, says a whole lot about us. We don’t care that none of us were there and knows what happened, we jump to conclusions and assume we’re experts. We care about the story, but we don’t care about the actual facts. Headlines and click-bait are far more interesting than thinking for ourselves. We like to point out other any bit of perceived injustice or discrimination we can find – it’s practically a new national past-time. We like playing victim, and we like talking about victims – so much so we sometimes find victims where none really existed. We also like to find somebody to blame, even when there’s nobody at fault. We like to play social justice warrior on our Facebooks and Twitters, posting memes and headlines without digging in behind the sensationalism, winning bonus sensitivity points in the forms of likes and re-tweets. Once group-think kicks in, we rally around hash tags and start shouting moral outrage in a deafeningly loud national chorus. The media plays us like a fiddle, and we don’t even notice we’ve all been had.

As for me, I’m glad to apply the lessons I’ve learned as an electronics enthusiast to other aspects of life. There’s no emotion in troubleshooting a circuit, electricity doesn’t have morals. There’s just physics, and logic, and methodology. I think we could all benefit from applying a little more of that sort of thinking to these situations.

* Correction: A reader and commenter, Joe Donaldson, tracked down the clock in a Radio Shack catalog dated 1986. It’s likely that my guess of mid-to-late 70s was off by a bit, and it’s now obvious it was a model that was for sale in the mid 80s. Though it doesn’t really change the point, I want to post this correction here for accuracy sake and thank Joe for the heads up. (See the comment here, with link to the catalog page.)


  • Slugger_McBuster

    Yep, there sure are some dumb fcking people in this country.

    If a kid with a Christian name wears an American flag or eats a pop-tart into the shape of a gun, he gets suspended, and it’s all part of the “zero tolerance” liberal Utopia that pervades the youth-indoctrination programs — er, I mean, “schools.”

    The kid with the Muslim name shoves a bunch of wires and a circuit board and a digital timer into a briefcase — nope, nothing potentially suspicious there — brings it to school, and the dumbfck liberals in the media make him a cause celebre and the dumbfck drones raise a bunch of money for him for pulling this little stunt.

    • AKenerly

      Two totally different locations within America, but nice strawman though.

    • Christopher Smith

      > If a kid with a Christian name wears an American flag or eats a pop-tart into the shape of a gun, he gets suspended, and it’s all part of the “zero tolerance” liberal Utopia that pervades the youth-indoctrination programs — er, I mean, “schools.”

      While the kid did eat a pop-tart into the shape of a gun, that isn’t why he was suspended. In fact, when he was suspended they cited a long history of behavioural problems and did *not* cite a “zero tolerance” policy. While I hate “zero tolerance” policies, the mere fact that they had repeated problems with the kid demonstrates there was “tolerance” of his behaviour.

  • Disqusted

    Since I’m a visually-based person I like to use Google Image Search quite often. Search “suitcase alarm clock” and then “suitcase bomb”. I dunno, interesting to me…

  • 2maxpower

    you have missed the point.

    a hoax bomb is not a laughing matter and that was the intent of this “clock”.

    don’t you know when you are being played? the intent is to make us look like stupid islamaphobes.

    if a white kid did that he would not be in school and he would not be invited to meet the homo in the white house.

    • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

      It’s a bit like Muslims pushing things on planes, usually sending passengers and flight attendants into a panic. Truth comes out on social media from outraged passengers later, while the idiot airlines always check their PC dials and gauges before saying anything, other than that they turned back and the passengers were “met by authorities”. Who will put them on a different flight.

      Oh, yes. Life in Ameristan.

    • AKenerly

      Wrong. If a white kid did that, he would be going about his day as usual.

      • jj333

        No, you’re wrong! White kids a whole lot younger than Achmed have been suspended for using their fingers as weapons. Google search it if you’re interested in truth rather than your own rhetoric.

  • next bubble

    I will say that when I saw the picture of the clock, it clearly wasn’t a bomb. No explosive, just electronics. To me this says more about zero tolerance policies being the biggest problem of which there are too many examples. Secondly, I am no longer amazed by how little supposedly educated school employees know about things.

    Nice job finding the actual clock. I still have a mid-70’s RCA AM/FM clock radio in my garage that works.

    • Slugger_McBuster

      Thanks for your expertise from your (doubtless) decades as a bomb-squad detective..

      • Blah Blah

        He’s McGruff the crime dog!

      • Daily Gut Check

        If you have clue one about electronics (and not just Leftist BS lip-flapping, like you) it is all rather elementary.

        Your psuedo-intellectual comment just make you look stupid.

      • next bubble

        I have taken apart many electronic devices in my time (stereos, TVs, computers, and more), and usually was able to put them back together. So yes, I know what I was looking at. Thanks for asking.

      • Daily Gut Check

        Now imagine it from the perspective of a school teacher without your knowledge.

      • next bubble

        I have and it was the point of my second point in my original post. It also explains so many bad results as part of zero tolerance about all kinds of things, pop tarts in the shape of a gun, etc.

      • Daily Gut Check

        This is a little different from a Pop Tart gun, wouldn’t you agree?

      • Slugger_McBuster

        Yeah, or when little Joey Miller pulls a girl’s hair in the first grade and gets charged with “sexual harassment,” liberals are all good with that — as long as it’s the little Christian boy getting humiliated for being a normal spirited boy.

      • next bubble

        No, they both illustrate the same problem of zero tolerance and related policies. Even in the case of the clock, the kid was arrested, and that seems beyond what was needed to sort out the situation.

      • Daily Gut Check

        No? Hmmm. At such point, I really must question the seriousness of your response and your ability to think critically in even most elementary ways.

        Hindsight is 20/20.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        If you had a clue about anything at all, you’d grasp the simple concept that a briefcase with wires and a timer brought to school is going to raise a few alarm bells.

        In your cartoon world, you probably think all bombs look like a dozen sticks of red dynamite strapped together with a big long fuse.

      • next bubble

        Of course they don’t, but to be a bomb it needs to be something, not nothing. Hey, I’m sure you thought the pop tart gun was real because you can’t tell.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        But seriously, what did you think this kid was trying to accomplish here?

      • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

        Not what he was saying – that’s for sure.

      • next bubble

        I don’t really know, since I haven’t met him. I will speculate that the kid repurposed a clock and wanted credit for building it instead.

        That would be something a teenager would do.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        When you finally meet him, please let us know, ‘kay?

      • Blah Blah

        Well he didn’t build jack squat either so he already failed in the honesty department. Hmmmm?

      • next bubble

        If my speculation is right, yes he failed in honesty.

      • TheNameGame

        wow a 14 year old lied? What has this world come to?

        Of course, I don’t claim to know whether that was the case or not, but I’m not an idiot that just jumps to conclusions. Just a troll.

      • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

        Repurposing a clock into a briefcase is step 1 of building a time bomb.

      • next bubble

        Its not briefcase, it is a pencil box, just a bit bigger than the clock. As many have pointed out pretty much any electronic clock can trigger a bomb. So can most cellphones be used as triggers for a bomb (by call or timer). I would argue acquiring the explosive is the key step as that is not as readily available.

      • Daily Gut Check

        Says you.

      • MaryEJ

        Why put a clock in a briefcase and close it… how can u see what time it is? Also, why even CONSIDER a lock on the case? I don’t understand.

      • Blah Blah

        No you don’t understand, he invented a clock in a box!
        ;D

      • AKenerly

        >repurposed a clock

        >repurposed

        I think you mean reseated.

      • MaryEJ

        I think it was possibly to get money.. as he is doing. Next there will be a wrongful detention/arrest lawsuit to go along with his free college and many fundraiser accounts.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        As the other commenter said, “This is a little different from a Pop Tart gun, wouldn’t you agree?”

        If you cannot differentiate from the two situations, then I take back my comment about your (doubtless) years of expertise as a cracker-jack bomb-squad detective.

        You clearly couldn’t tell the red wire from the duct tape.

      • next bubble

        They are both obvious to me, the answer I am getting from you is that I can’t possibly know what i am talking about so any situation requires the school to arrest the kid in the spot. No logic to be applied to the situation.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        Yakkity yakkity zippity do. Circular logic is coming from you.

        EDIT — i’m getting punchy here. Off to bed.

      • Slugger_McBuster

        I’m getting punchy here. Off to bed.

      • Daily Gut Check

        Allegedly he was arrested for not answering questions.

      • Daily Gut Check

        What is your agenda here? I gave you the benefit of the doubt, but my BS meter is going off now.

      • Adam Lee

        FINALLY! THE TRUTH. There is so much BS in various discussion board. There are so many people like next bubble who I don’t think are average people, but individuals working for someone or some group trying to shape public opinions with their comments and other probably paid individuals upvoting them. Aren’t there entire staff or offices whose soul purpose is to shape public opinion by manipulating these discussion board, here, on reddit, on outube, etc. I seriously believe next bubble is full of BS and so are his friends and so are those who vote for them.

      • TheNameGame

        I’m confused….you think he’s full of BS because he says there were no explosives in the picture? or that he has an old clock in his garage? or that he put together electronics?

        Why don’t you just verify yourself….it’s not like those are extremely subjective points (except the latter two, which are irrelevant anyways to whether the clock looked like a bomb or not).

        I do agree, it looks like a movie bomb…..but wires do not make a bomb

      • MaryEJ

        The law that was in question is bringing in something that was intended to scare people in a school setting. It IS a law.

      • Daily Gut Check

        AGAIN… a teacher does not know this. Just because you do, does not mean there is a reasonable expectation that a teacher would. There may be other extenuating circumstances not reported.

        The teacher did the right thing. You can’t go to Walmart without seeing the televised, government “see something, say something” propaganda spread in-store,

      • TheNameGame

        ….the teacher might’ve done the right thing….the cops though? Come on….no bomb squad, no evacuation, no protocol, nothing.

      • jj333

        How the cops treated Achmed had nothing to do with whether or not the bomb was real – they knew it wasn’t real – no need for bomb squad or evacuation. However, the situation was no different than if the kid brought a fake gun to school. Not sure why people don’t get that!

      • TheNameGame

        a briefcase w/ wires and a timer….you really need to see how far technology has progressed nowadays. I don’t consider myself tech savvy, but I do work in Silicon Valley for a huge tech company and you’d probably poop your pants at all the wires and timers in small devices that you’d see.

      • Daily Gut Check

        Sorry misread.

    • MaryEJ

      I am no bomb expert. If I saw it, I would be a little freaked. Not many know to look for the c-4 lol

  • Jack Sarfatti

    BRAVO! Keep up the good work. All my left wing lib friends have egg on their face especially our President’s incompetent PR staff and Mark Zuckerberg who have proclaimed the kid a genius etc. etc.

    • Blah Blah

      Funny thing is, even if the kid did build the clock from scratch ( breadboard, etc ) in todays day and age anyone can do it just by following along in a youtube video.

      Let’s see him try to figure it out 25 years ago.

    • Christopher Smith

      Here’s Mark Zuckerberg’s statement: https://www.facebook.com/zuck/posts/10102373304096361

      He implies he has “the skill and ambition to build something cool”, but doesn’t proclaim him a genius.

      Similarly, from @POTUS: https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/644193755814342656

      He say the clock is cool, but otherwise just hopes kids like Ahmed will be inspired to like science.

      So no, neither of them suggested he was a genius…

      The kid himself said the clock was very simple and small compared to the stuff he normally did, and only took him 20 minutes to build.

      Really, it’d have to be a pretty amazing clock to warrant being evidence of a genius. You really don’t need much to make a digital clock, most kid digital electronics kits have a digital clock as one of the earliest works. The magnate school about 30 miles from our place seventh grades doing gene sequencing, and most of them aren’t geniuses. It’d take a

      Near as I can tell, the only person who has asserted he was a genius was his 15-year-old cousin, who probably isn’t the best judge of genius and no doubt was sticking up for his cousin. He was also likely basing his assessment not on the clock, but the work Ahmed did with him for their middle school robotics team. I haven’t found any media sources proclaiming him a genius themselves outside of headlines referencing the cousin; they would hardly know either way.

      So the fact that it isn’t hard to build the clock shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone, and certain shouldn’t change anyone’s impression of the kid’s intelligence.

      • jj333

        Barry wouldn’t even have noticed if Achmed wasn’t brown.

      • Christopher Smith

        Well, he probably wouldn’t have noticed if it weren’t for the media attention it drew, but I think the President’s office has shown more than enough willingness to seize any publicity opportunity that comes their way.

      • MaryEJ

        But yet, he did not build it.He took one out of the casing and claimed ‘he’ built it.

      • Christopher Smith

        Short of melting down sand, smelting some metals, and building his own transistors, most people who “build” digital clocks start from preassembled pieces. I hear people say they “built” their computer all the time, when all they might have done is to put together a few pre-assembled parts that were designed to fit together. In boy scouts kids have craft projects where they build picture frames and yes… clocks, where all they do is add decorations.

        The kid said it was only 20 minutes work and really simple compared to the stuff he usually did… like perhaps the robotics work he did in middle school. “Built” means a lot of different things to a lot of people. What exactly did you expect he meant by having “built” it, and how exactly does this difference between your perception and “took one out of the casing” change matters?

      • MaryEJ

        OK, how about the word ‘invention’?

        https://youtu.be/3mW4w0Y1OXE

      • Christopher Smith

        Yup, “invention” is a loaded term. Heck, you take something that already functions as desired and put it in a different context and not only do some call it invention, it might be patentable!

      • MaryEJ

        OK lol. The kid did not ‘make’, ‘create’, invent’ anything. He took the parts of the clock out of the clock and put it into another case. I believe If I were to do something similar with say..an iPhone, I would be sued into oblivion. But hey, you keep on with that denial. Its your life lol

      • Berferd

        I think it might be his job. It is election season and the trolls are out.

      • Christopher Smith

        Funny you should mention the iPhone. You can find lots of examples online of people who have “built” or “invented” or “created” things that are just different cases on an iPhones. They don’t get sued to oblivion, nor would you, because they don’t sell the phone, just the case/housing (and in Ahmed/your case, nothing was being sold, so that pretty much makes it impossible for them to sue you), and they are very careful how they reference the iPhone brand. You may mock it, but some of them have *multiple* patents on their developments, often for ideas based on techniques that are hundreds of years old, but hadn’t been applied to the covering of an electronic phone before.

        I’m sure Ahmed’s words to describe his work on the clock don’t meet your expectations for the terms, but he certainly does meet the dictionary & legal definition, and isn’t *at all* unlike how kids his age often use the terms, particularly those actively involved in the whole maker movement. I hear it even from adults at maker spaces all the time.

        Honestly though, if he hasn’t said something wrong, I’d think that would make the whole thing seem a lot more suspicious. Without a *lot* of coaching, a 14 year-old isn’t likely to handle media scrutiny for even this long without saying something wrong. If has somehow managed to make it this far without saying the wrong word or phrase once in a while, that would lend some credence to the notion his politically experienced father *had* coached him.

      • MaryEJ

        The kid knew what he was doing. He knew it would be potentially suspicious. It was a planned event. All the pieces of the puzzle were there. The kid screwed up on the interview. Thanks to freaking bleeding heart can-t-see-the-knife-in-my-face liberals, he will probably get off scott-free and be declared some type of hero for all those poor oppressed and picked on minority types. The family will enjoy a large inflow of cash and you are boring me now. YOU know it is all BS and you can pick apart the words invent and make and create all you like. Have a great time with that. We all know how this goes.

      • Reason And Believing

        Ahmed’s phony clockbomb has nothing to do with an interest in science
        He just took a cover off an old clock and out it in a small briefcase styel pencil box
        That’s only an interest in science if you are a retarded terrorist.

    • Ack Ack Ack

      Meanwhile the kid is raking it in, including 250k for tuition, pissing all over your faces in the process. Pisssss.

  • Experiment #626

    that kinda looks like a bomb to me

    • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

      It was supposed to. Just enough.

    • djsurrey

      But based on what? TV and movie props?
      Why would a bomb be so small and why would a bomb have a power cord? A little too easy to defuse a bomb if one can just pull the power cord. A lot of this talk reminds me of the original Get Smart.

  • Christopher Smith

    > . During this video interview he again claims it was his “invention” and that he “made” the device

    He does say he made the device *and he did*, he doesn’t say it is his “invention” in the interview. He says he is an inventor (not an usual claim for 14 year-olds) and shows some other things that he says he invented. The interview is heavily edited so you can’t really tell what exactly he’s saying he invented, but it couldn’t be the clock because AFAIK it is still in police custody.

  • dextersgenius

    Typo in the article:

    > “I don’t feel a need to take the first exist to conclusionville.”

    Should be “exit”.

  • smith

    THE PLOT THICKENS SUPPORTING THIS WAS ALL INTENTIONAL FOR AN ISAMIC AGENDA!!!!!

    The picture of Ahmed wearing his nasa tshirt being taken away was taken by his SISTER! Now the person who posted it is anildash on twitter. BUT his first post about the case to spread news of poor ahmads case coincidentally had propaganda against the city mayor, what did she have to do with it??? It said,,,”Irving, TX, with one of the most virulently Islamophobic mayors in the U.S., handcuffs a teen for his invention. and links the dallasnews report of his arrest”

    This anil guy is personal friends with Ahmeds family. His father being an islam activist too, seems weird this first post talks about the mayor. (Look what the mayor has been doing to see why they would say that).

    THEN when the famous picture of poor ahmed wearing his NASA tshirt was viral, was also posted by this guy, it said….”I expect they will have more to say tomorrow, but Ahmed’s sister asked me to share this photo. A NASA shirt!”

    The media makes it seem like he was alone and no family, HIS SISTER WAS THERE. AND THERE TO TAKE THE PICTURE W/ him in his NASA shirt. And they make sure to point out the nasa shirt in the post!

    This islam/muslim activist family/organization really thought this through didn’t they!!

    • smith

      For those who may have missed earlier posts, his father is a news headline sharia law activist, sudan presidental candidate, and if you look up how the mayor has been trying to protect american law and keep sharia law out and non binding on USA citizens, it all starts to make sense!

      • Blah Blah

        Do you know how old the sister is?
        Was she a student at the school?

      • smith

        No idea, but the dallas news linked that photo from that anil guy on twitter and since his post said it was given by his sister, seems that’s the original source. I had wondered who and how that photo had been taken, didn’t make sense at all. I guess his family didn’t count on that guy as saying it was from her. But i’m sure that might be one of the details the school may have wanted to say but they can’t talk since the family hasn’t consented.

      • smith

        Ok just found out two sisters age 17 and 18 both set up the istandwithahmed twitter account. So good chance one if not both were students.

      • Blah Blah

        Thanks.
        Still this whole thing smells fishy.

      • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

        There is also some weird connection to the Koran-burning guy, that seemed to be a set-up for the Benghazi video lies. There’s a lot of very weird BS going on.

        Check near the end of this article for the scoop.

        http://theconservativetreehouse.com/2015/09/18/briefcase-clock-maker-ahmed-mohamed-is-son-of-muslim-activist/

      • smith

        Yea, he debated with that guy and made national headlines and also with another guy about sharia law and human rights. His father is an activist and likes to make national headlines. Makes it more likely he put his son up to this.

      • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

        Have to agree. But to me, the whole thing looks like a cast. Walid Shoebat swears that the bogus video was also a scam by Muslims, and that there were ties to the Hillary camp.

      • Christopher Smith

        > his father is a news headline sharia law activist

        Their mosque was offering to mediate disputes… you know, like church’s do. It’s non-binding and doesn’t override any laws (something Duyne herself pointed out), and they weren’t trying to change any of that (quite the opposite, AFAIK there were no lawyers involved who were licensed to practice law in Texas, nor were they any Texas judges involved… just like church mediations). Leach & Duyne dressed it up as shariah law to whip up a frenzy for political ends, but there was otherwise nothing controversial about what they were doing.

        I’m sure his father is political very active and that is no doubt why they were able to garner media attention. That doesn’t exactly justify the school or the police’s response. If anything, I’d have expected they’d be far more cautious, so we can should expect worse behaviour if another kid were to do something like this.

      • http://www.thegantry.net/blog Casey

        I’m sure his father is political very active and that is no doubt why
        they were able to garner media attention. That doesn’t exactly justify
        the school or the police’s response. If anything, I’d have expected
        they’d be far more cautious, so we can should expect worse behaviour if
        another kid were to do something like this.

        BWAHAHAHAH!! Ummm, no. Take one (1) Muslim activist, mix in a gullible son with a cheesy “disassembled parts” digital clock which resembles a Hollywood bomb, and enjoy the resulting dog & pony show.

        Better yet, if something bad had happened, the same talking heads would be flipping about over why “authorities” hadn’t “done something.”

      • Christopher Smith

        > BWAHAHAHAH!! Ummm, no.

        So, you think if he’d been some other kid, whose parents weren’t politically active and generally seen as a PITA, and he brought in a “cheesy disassembled parts digital clock” you’d expect that *that* kid would be handled with kid gloves and there’d be no concern?

        I’d have thought they’d have been much harder on another kid where they didn’t expect the parents to give them any trouble for it, but maybe you’re right. If so, that seems terribly unfair to Ahmed, to punish him for his father’s activism.

  • Mike

    Trump mooslum question, sudanese clock all setup to further divide. prez base voters still winning

    • http://wolfmoon1776.wordpress.com/ Wolf Moon

      The media is so nutso at this point, to believe that they’re in any kind of touch with the voters.

      it’s like they’re holding cult meetings at Facebook and the White House, waiting for the UFO’s to come and bless Hillary. They actually think that their lies matter to us, affecting us though some voodoo process sanctified by Media Matters trolls.

      Sorry, media. It’s over.

    • Howie

      Be interesting to know if the lurch who asked Trump that question was a registered Democrat or suddenly has extra Walmart cash.

      • Blah Blah

        Wouldn’t surprise me one bit.

  • ant1248

    The thing is for one second no one ever thought he made a bomb. The teacher thought he made a bomb look alike on purpose.

  • djsurrey

    Given that this boy is just 14 I don’t see anything unusual or suspicious here. I can accept your analysis of the technical aspects of the project but I don’t see it as a hoax. Misuse of the term invention is not that uncommon. It is entirely possible that clock had not been working and it was fixed by replacing the power supply or some component of the power supply. Perhaps there was something wrong with the original case or buttons. Unfortunately a lot more has been said about the clock by the media than by the kid.
    It does not look at all like a bomb to me. The case is small..

    • Howie

      If I were to walk past this device in an airport terminal I would be like: Wow, what a neat looking clock in a pencil box hahaha

      • djsurrey

        Don’t know what you would think but I wanted to make a bomb timer I would not put a clock face on it. More likely a bomb left in an airport would look like a ordinary piece of luggage but not so small as a pencil case.

    • Glena Webb Will

      You’re straight up ignorant and living in dream land if you think this does NOT look like an explosive device. This little terrorist knew exactly what that thing looked like and purposely brought it to school to check out the response. now let me tell ya this, if schools are going to freak out over a pop tart bit to look like a gun they better Damn well loose their collective minds when little jihadist brings his fake bomb to school.

      • djsurrey

        It does not look like the trigger for an explosive device. One could make a timer out of any microcontroller. There is no need for a display. The trigger could be a lot smaller with current technology and I’d expect the case to be a lot bigger.

      • http://pokerati.com Dan Michalski

        >>This little terrorist knew exactly what that thing looked like<<

        Would you like an education on why this phrasing makes people who don't know you assume you are a racist?

      • opensky

        How do you know what an explosive device looks like? Are you an engineer or a bomb-squad officer? Face it: this impression comes from watching police dramas on TV, not from the real world. To anyone whose ever so much as opened up their desktop computer, this device looks nothing like a bomb.

    • Reason And Believing

      Okay, he did not just misuse a term.. He told his engineering teacher that he made the clock . I suspect he wanted to cause a purposeful commotion with that teacher but he was not alarmed
      He then set the clock to go off during his English class to cause concern
      He succeeded .

      • djsurrey

        Sounds like you are just jumping to conclusions. Bye the way how does one get from an alarm going off during class to suspicion of a bomb? Do bombs usually have alarm annunciators on them to draw attention?
        Students used to set alarms in my engineering classes if they thought the prof was going over time. No one got arrested.

    • David Sinclair

      The power cord is irrelevant. The battery backup would still activate the alarm, to wake you up, or activate the detonator, to blow you up.

      • djsurrey

        Not necessarily. Typical claim “Battery backup -Helps keep the correct time in the event of a power failure.”

  • ddcsol

    I agree with most of your conclusion that he took the guts out of an old clock and put them in his “pencil” case, but I think you jumped on the wrong clock. If you look at his video where he’s telling his story (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mW4w0Y1OXE) at 1:00 he shows the LED display and it’s clearly an ACU>RITE Intelli-Time display from one of their clocks. The internal circuit board and cables sure seem to be from the ’70s/’80s. I would certainly agree with your conclusion about him taking the internal components from an existing old clock and putting in a new shell, which I would call a repackaging, NOT something he made and certainly not something he invented. Thanks for the article.

  • CC

    The Texas authorities involved in this case should not in any way be strong-armed into feeling embarrassed regarding their commonsense suspicions concerning this device that very much resembles the timing apparatus of a homemade bomb, especially since it is housed in a small “suitcase” — unlike any commercial clock. Let’s face it — the device resembles a bomb far more than an innocent “clock”! During the days and months ahead, our public-safety personel will be more and more obligated to carry out their duties with greater and greater vigilance, not less, and we must allow them to err on the side of caution rather than to sacrifice watchfulness at the altar of political correctness.

    • TheNameGame

      It’s not political correctness. And it most certainly isn’t watchfulness when you don’t undergo any sort of bomb protocol. I like how people who claim they have taken apart electronics say it clearly isn’t a bomb, while everyone else who leaves out such claims says it looks potentially scary especially because of the “pencil” case that is much smaller than a suitcase.

      • Reason And Believing

        The did NOT think it was a bomb, They from the beginning were investigating a BOMB HOAX.

  • Michael

    To all the people screaming Islamophobia on this incident, I’d like to ask them this question: If they saw this briefcase sized item left unattended and in an airport would they notify airport security or would they just walk past it and think nothing of it? I know I would inform airport security, does that make me an Islamophobe? It couldn’t because I wouldn’t know who put it there in the first place. The teachers of this school are not experts on what is and what isn’t a bomb so they had every right to err on the side of caution and call the police. If this same kid was going to be somewhere Obama was going to be do you think the secret service agents would just let him walk up to Obama and sa?

    I’d also like to say that trust is something that you earn and it is something that can take a long time to earn and that it is something that can be lost in the blink of an eye. Muslims haven’t given us many reasons to entirely trust them. Just a few weeks ago a 15 year old Muslim in Philadelphia was arrested in a plot to kill the pope in his visit to the US. This kid was only 14 but terrorist indoctrination starts at some point in every terrorists life, how were people at the school supposed to know if this kid had been encouraged in some way to attack innocent non-Muslims? Kids as young as him have even run off and joined ISIS.

    • TheNameGame

      Your bit about trust is particularly ironic as many countries do not trust the United States, many people do not trust Jews, many people do not trust Christians, and many people do not trust either Republicans or Democrats depending which side they sit on. Eye of the beholder.

      • TheNameGame

        on that note, look at statistics and learn to interpret them comprehensively. That might ease your flawed perspectives and judgements. Or just know that Muslims kill more Muslims than members of other religions. Why? Proximity. Just like black Americans are more likely to kill black Americans, white Americans are more likely top kill white Americans, Chinese are more likely to kill Chinese, etc.

    • http://www.thegantry.net/blog Casey

      Um, Michael, did you read the article carefully? That isn’t a briefcase, but a pencil box which looks like a briefcase. Size is 8.25″ x 5.5″ x 2.5″

      Me, I think you’re a little bit loony on the topic, but on the other hand the school officials were correct to be careful. Possibly a publicity stunt for CAIR. No “phobia.”

      • Michael

        I did read the article and I know it was a pencil case, it was much larger than just about any pencil case I’ve ever seen. Every pencil case I’ve seen was made of plastic and was small enough to fit into a backpack. Claiming that a briefcase sized item is a pencil box and having electronical equipment like the boy had in it is always going to raise eyebrows regardless of who you are, and likely more eyebrows if that person is a Muslim.

    • opensky

      Suppose the school officials were just being cautious as you say. Wouldn’t the sane thing to do be to ask the kid’s engineering teacher, who (hopefully) could distinguish a clock from a bomb? And if they still felt the need to call police, couldn’t they have left off the three day suspension once it became clear that there had been neither a bomb nor a bomb threat? What did that suspension accomplish except to help administration pretend that the boy had been in the wrong rather than them? Also, once they arrived, the police ought to have respected Achmed’s rights to call his parents and have a lawyer if he was being questioned.

      The fact is that nobody really believed this was a bomb. If they had, they’d have evacuated the school and sent in the bomb squad, not just a few officers. I don’t know why they did this, but I know it wasn’t for the reasons given.

  • gaige

    This was just micro-jihad. Testing the waters, like when Muslims intentionally act suspiciously on commercial flights in the United States. Scare the infidels, push the envelope, maybe gin up a lawsuit and use the media coverage to enforce PC pro-Muslim attitudes in the mainstream culture.

    The kid is 14, which is fighting age. His father is a well-known sharia activist, therefore a jihadist. In a few more years, I fully expect little Ahmed to either go overseas and join ISIS, or by then far more likely walk into a mall with an AK and murder a few dozen of his “fellow Americans.”

    Islam has no place in America.

  • Mary Brown

    At his age I was designing and building professional looking circuit boards in the 70’s. We made negatives from the artwork and used a photo resist technique to make them in electronics class. I designed and built a light chaser circuit from a bunch of scrap IC’s the school was given. No copying something, I sat down, looked at the pinouts, breadboarded the design. Drew the artwork and built a prototype that won the industrial design competition in Minnesota high schools.

    He repackaged the guts of an old clock in a case in such a way to make it RESEMBLE a bomb! There was no I built this, he built crap! I had my ham license at his age and was building a lot of electronic stuff so I could have a station of my own!

  • http://theblacksphere.net/2013/05/obama-v-bush-who-throws-like-a-girl/ Capital Bike Share Menace

    Radio Shack should consider making and selling these clocks again. Hipsters would be all over them. Maybe they would sell enough to exit bankruptcy on their own terms?

  • smith

    Sharia law is the key to the mystery of this whole thing!

    Ahmeds father is a sharia law activist.
    On 9/14, the day this all happened, news agencies were reporting that Yale opened a sharia law center w/ 10million from Saudi Arabi!!! Nobody really saw that thought because of the story of Ahmed!! a distraction!
    ALSO just so happens that Irving Mayor is the most outspoken and has been working to pass laws to protect USA and such from Sharia law after rumors of sharia law being practiced in Texas. Look it up!!
    Is it coincidence then that Ahmeds and his families twitter, donation accepter, and the person who posted his NASA shirt, when he first posted about Ahmed mentioned how he was arrested in Irving, where the most islamphicphobe mayor of America lives? And why many news reports attacking her. How the mosque Ahmen and and family go to also had comments?

    This was all a sham to help quell the biggest opposition to shariah law and hide the story of yale opening it.

  • newguy

    with the pencil box closed and a cut-out so only the LED is exposed on the outside….it would look very much like a bomb from classic action movies. Black box with red numbers counting down

    • John Gardeniers

      Two points:

      1 – It also looks just like my bedside clock.
      2 – Who in his right mind would build a bomb like they do in the movies? Real bombs don’t normally expose information externally that would only benefit those you’re trying to blow up.

      • MaryEJ

        Who in their right mind would buy a clock that is concealed in a small box that would require you to open it to see what time it was? Additionally, who would want to put a ‘lock’on it and then change their minds because it may look ‘suspicious’?

  • opensky

    What’s the idea here? That a 14-yr-old must hand-draw his own circuit board or else be pilloried for using the word “invention?” Surely nobody thinks he is claiming to be the first person on Earth to make a clock. He really just means he built a clock, and uses the word invent because it makes him feel cool. That is harmless and normal for teenagers. I teach HS, and making your own circuit board would be properly a matter for distinguishing A+ from A- work, not for denying its legitimacy, much less justifying an arrest.

    What you’ve shown here is a clock that could have been the source of the mainboard he used, and a picture of his clock which has been labeled with names of other parts that happened to be in that source clock. But what is the evidence that the portion of Achmed’s clock labeled “alarm and dimmer” actually is an alarm and dimmer? How do you know that? It seems you’ve just pasted part names onto the photo without any evidence.

    Finally, I would like to see how anyone would fit an 8 1/4″ pencil box into that frame a bit under 8″ wide. Do you think it’s narrow enough to sit in there at an angle? Claiming that “the dimensions all line up perfectly” made me laugh a bit. They’re nowhere near perfect.

    This article is framed as an independent investigation driven not by politics but by curiosity about the electronics. Does it live up to that billing?

  • Jeff

    I suspect Ahmed’s device was made at the behest of his father for political, ideological, and/or litigious reasons. What exactly was the purpose? He didn’t do anything for engineering or art purposes, attaching the LED but the rest of it scattered about in the pencil box. Dad said, “Repurpose an old digital clock to turn it into a fake bomb looking device, zero tolerance for violent appearing imagery and objects at school will get you kicked out, and I’ll run to local Islamic activist groups, media, and lawyers and we’ll get famous, file a lawsuit, and create additional sympathy against Islamophobia.”

    • MaryEJ

      And a lot of spending cash as well as a free ride to the school of his choice.
      Poor little guy. (THAT last part was extreme sarcasm)

  • jerseydevil

    Luckily…he wasn’t White…Goth…w/a name like Dylan Klebold… (even though the “bombs Klebold and Harris had “fizzled”…)