IRVING, Texas – A 14-year-old Muslim student who was allegedly racially profiled when he brought a clock to school that looked suspiciously like a bomb has moved to Qatar in the aftermath.

But federal officials are now demanding records from his former school district in Irving, Texas, and may require the school’s police officers and staff to undergo training on “religious tolerance,” according to the Dallas Morning News.

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Ahmed Mohamed was arrested Sept. 14 after he brought a “clock” to school and showed it off to several teachers. The “clock” was essentially a disassembled Radio Shack clock that Mohamed rigged together inside of a pencil box with extra wires, which appeared to many to look a lot like a hoax bomb.

After interrogating the student, police and school officials determined the device wasn’t a threat and released the teen, prompting allegations of religious profiling because he’s Muslim. President Obama and many others were quick to paint the issue in that light, with the president Tweeting directly to Mohamed to invite him to the White House.

According to The Washington Post, “Ahmed’s story went viral, with the hashtag #IStandWithAhmed bringing out legions of supporters including Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton and Google co-founder Sergey Brin. Tweets, think pieces and daytime TV segments were dedicated to dissecting how Ahmed’s situation typified racism and Islamaphobia in America.”

The week before Mohamed met with Obama, he was rubbing elbows with Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, an alleged war criminal wanted for “murder, torture, rape and genocide,” according to Mashable.

The day after his visit with Obama, his family moved to Qatar.

Yet despite his departure, the federal government continues its work to correct the “injustice” at the prodding of several Congressmen.

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“Reports surrounding the incident strongly suggest that Ahmed Mohamed was systematically profiled based on his faith and ethnicity,” the lawmakers wrote in a Sept. 22 letter to the Department of Justice, urging the agency to investigate the incident further.

“This incident highlights an alarming trend in the profiling of Muslim Americans not only by law enforcement, but in our society as a whole,” the letter alleges.

And it seems like the feds are pursuing the request with zeal.

“They’ve asked for a number of things,” Irving Independent School District spokeswoman Lesley Weaver told the Dallas Morning News. “We’ve been gathering documents.”

School officials wouldn’t reveal what documents, exactly, the government is after.

Meanwhile, officials with a different branch of the Department of Justice – a community relations arm described as a “peacemaker” service – are meeting with local Muslim leaders to discuss next steps.

The group is taking issue with comments made by Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne, who raised concerns that all of the details about the hoax bomb were not reported by the media in appearance on Glen Beck’s The Blaze, EAGnews reports.

In the same episode, Beck and Center for Security Policy’s Jim Hanson discussed the possibility that the whole issue was a planned “dog whistle” moment for Islamists that was contrived to weaken defenses for a “civilization jihad.”

“At a meeting this week inside Irving’s largest mosque, the imam, Ahmed’s uncle and a family friend said they discussed the mayor’s interviews and other concerns with federal officials from the community relations unit,” the Morning News reports.

And it appears that’s where the idea of imposing “religious tolerance” training on Irving ISD was born.

Federal “officials who visited the mosque did raise the possibility of training Irving teachers or police in religious tolerance in the wake of Ahmed’s arrest, according to people at the meeting,” the Morning News reports.

“There’s an expert in the Islamic religion who’s already giving training sessions” for the agency in other cities,” Imam Zia Sheikh told the news site. “They may tap into his expertise, or may call upon me.”