After
highlighting that some of his sources are now under threat of 20-yearprison terms, conservative political commentator Glenn Beck revealed
intelligence on Monday that questions the exoneration of a Saudinational once considered a suspect in the Boston bombings by federalagents.
"We
don't know at this point how he was involved … but I do know he was
involved," said Beck on The Blaze TV.
"You
can ask yourself this question, 'How many times does lightning have
to strike in the first place for this guy to be at the scene of the
crime and in the hospital and not be involved?" he added.
Last
week, Beck primed his audience for the explosive revelation of the
story that could be the most important story "of our lifetime."
Claiming
that he wanted the federal government to come clean with the Americanpeople, he gave them until this Monday to tell the truth about the Saudi national. In referring to the former suspect, he said: "We
know [he] is a very bad, bad, bad man," while flipping three
fingers indication three unspoken reasons why.
On
Monday, when federal authorities failed to respond to his ultimatum,
Beck revealed the questionable circumstances under which Saudi
national Abdul Rahman Ali Issa Al-Salimi Al-Harbi, or Alharbi was
downgraded from a dangerous suspected terrorist to essentially a
"nobody" by federal authorities.
In his report, Beck disclosed that Al-Harbi was first identified as a person of interest in the Boston bombings and noted that the U.S.Customs and Border Protection's National Targeting Center had issued an event file recommending his deportation under section 212, 3B indication "proven terrorist activity."
"We
are not sure who actually tagged him as a '212 3B,' but we know it is
very difficult to charge someone with this — it has to be almost
certain," Beck explained. "It is the equivalent in civil
society of charging someone with premeditated murder and seeking the
death penalty — it is not thrown around lightly."
Beck
further explained that Secretary of State John Kerry later met with
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud last Tuesday then the FBI began
"backtracking on the Saudi national from suspect, to person of
interest, to witness, to victim, to nobody," according to TheBlaze report.
Then last Wednesday, President Barack Obama reportedly had a "chance" encounter with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud and Saudi Ambassador Adelal-Jubeir. Later that day, Al-Harbi's event file was altered.
"Wednesday at 5:35 p.m. the file is altered," explained Beck in his report. "This is unheard of, this is impossible in the timeline due to the severity of the charge …. You don't one day put a 212 3B charge against somebody with deportation, and then the next day take it off. It would require too much to do it."
Among
other evidence, Beck pointed out that the Saudi national was once
flagged on a terror watch list but was granted a student visa to
enter the U.S. Anyway.
In another
report from Okaz.com and translated for The Blaze by Steven
Miller, a research associate with the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies, Al-Harbi allegedly says federal authorities only asked
him about what he saw during the bombings, apologized and promised
him "special health care."
"He
clarified that security officials asked him to focus on what he saw
before the bombings, and on the nature of the event [to see] if he
remembers what happened around him … he thanked American
authorities who refuted media allegations about his status as a
suspect …," according to the report.
Beck
promised on his show that there is more intelligence to be revealed
possibly well into next week.
Source: christianpost
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