The family of the 14-year-old Muslim boy who was led out of school in handcuffs has hired attorneys to get back the homemade clock that administrators mistook for a bomb.
Ahmed Mohamed was suspended after showing his clock to a teacher at his Irving, Texas, high school last week. His case sparked an outcry on social media and attracted the attention of President Obama and a number of tech companies who invited Ahmed to visit.
RELATED: Ahmed Mohamed withdraws from school that suspended him for clock
His family said in a statement Wednesday that it had pulled Ahmed and his two siblings out of the Irving school district “because of religious persecution,” and had decided to home-school the kids.
Two Dallas attorneys, Thomas Bowers and Reggie London, have been hired “to pursue Ahmed’s legal rights and regain his science project from the Irving Police Department,” the statement added.
Bowers has handled high-profile cases before, including a sexual assault allegation against Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and a family dispute between billionaire T. Boone Pickens and his son Michael.
The family said it is suing because Ahmed has been “severely traumatized,” and they hope no one else will experience what he did.








