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Clockmaker Ahmed: I won't meet police chief without my lawyer

Technically Incorrect: After being arrested for making his own digital clock, the newest science celebrity shows humor during a press conference and an appearance on MSNBC. He says he's transferring schools.

Chris Matyszczyk
3 min read
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First he was arrested. Now he's being courted by MIT. What a week. © Vernon Bryant/Dallas Morning News/Corbis

Technically Incorrect offers a slightly twisted take on the tech that's taken over our lives.


If only everyone who was wrongfully arrested could enjoy an aftermath like this.

Wednesday proved to be a little different than Monday for 14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed.

Should you have been unaccountably living in one of Donald Trump's trouser legs for the last couple of days, you might not know that Mohamed made a digital clock to impress his teacher.

Instead, his school, MacArthur High in Irving, Texas, called the police on Monday. Five uniformed men arrested him and accused him of making a hoax bomb. Oh, and they handcuffed him. "For his own personal safety and that of his officers," as the police later told me.

The fact that he's dark skinned, has the last name Mohamed and is a Muslim must have moved the police toward additional safety precautions.

Once the police paused to consider the facts -- or, rather, once Mohamed and his family began talking to the media -- the young science buff became a symbol for progress. Everyone from President Barack Obama to our future President Zuckerberg invited him to visit.

But what about Ahmed himself? Not every nerdy teen could face the cameras of America's media. Yet here he was on Wednesday at a press conference, celebrating that the hoax-bomb charges had been dropped.

He was slightly nervous, certainly. Still, he began, "I'm the person who built a clock and got in a lot of trouble for it."

He said he really wants to go to MIT. He also revealed that he's thinking about transferring out of MacArthur High "to any other school." He was fulsome in his praise for everyone on Twitter and Facebook who had supported him. The #IStandWithAhmed hashtag has become a focus for those who believe he was ill-treated and that he's just a nerdy kid trying to make things.

His advice to anyone out there who has talents they'd like to explore? "Go for it. Don't let people change who you are. Even if you get consequence for it, I still suggest you show it to people, because you need to show them your talent."

The boy isn't without humor -- and a little street wisdom. Told that the Irving police chief wanted to meet with him, he was asked whether he would agree to such a meeting. He said, "Not without my lawyer."

His favorite invention so far? Bluetooth speakers. He's not keen on talking about his latest inventions, because he wants to get them patented first. Oh, and he wants to appear on "Shark Tank." We all have imperfections, especially at 14.

Once this was over, Mohamed appeared on MSNBC. There he said that the police, when they arrested him, didn't even let him contact his parents. He was interrogated for an hour and 25 minutes, he said.

And then MSNBC's Chris Hayes introduced Dr. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein from MIT. She told Ahmed he was her ideal student, but please could he think about switching to physics. Prescod-Weinstein is an astrophysicist. And of course she invited him to visit.

A spokeswoman for the Irving Independent School District said during a press conference that "the information that has been made public to this point has been very unbalanced," according to The Washington Post. She said all the school was doing was ensuring the safety of everyone on campus. If the information was unfair and unbalanced, perhaps at some point the school will perform a rebalancing act.

All the school seems to have ensured for now is that Ahmed Mohamed will have a very different life from the one he might have imagined a week ago.