Conservative radio host Glenn Beck is at it again. Beck, known for his outrageous comments on American political life, is now saying that he plans to expose what he calls a government cover-up and conspiracy involving the Boston Marathon bombings.
According to Beck's website, The Blaze, a Saudi national previously believed to have been a person of interest in the attack was to be deported under Section 212 3B. The section, which is found in the Department of Justice's Executive Office for Review's benchbook, is called "Classes for Aliens Ineligible for Visas or Admission-Terrorist Activities."
The Blaze added that the Saudi national, identified as Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi, was initially associated with the bombings but is no longer being labeled a suspect. However, Beck contended that this change is part of a government cover-up led by President Obama and the Saudi government.
The Blaze reported that an ICE official confirmed that they had another Saudi national in custody but that he was "in no way" connected to the Boston bombings.
The publication also cited Fox News reporter Todd Starnes, who reported that Alharbi was not only flagged for terrorist activities but was still given a student visa. This prompted Beck to call Alharbi the third suspect in the Boston bombing.
"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 said during his radio show. "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 continued that after Secretary of State John Kerry met with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud, "the FBI began backtracking on the Saudi national from suspect, to person of interest, to witness, to victim, to nobody."
The radio host added that on Wednesday Alharbi's file was changed. "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," he said.
"There are only two people that could revoke the deportation order - the director of the NTC could do it after speaking with each department, the FBI, the ATC, etc. - which is impossible to do in such a short period of time, - or, somebody at the very highest levels of the State Department could do it. We don't have any evidence to tell you which one did it," Beck concluded.
On Monday, surviving Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was charged with using weapons of mass destruction and malicious destruction of property from his bed at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He and his brother Tamerlan, who died in a shootout on Friday, allegedly placed two pressure cooker bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon just minutes before the two exploded, killing three and injuring over 180.