Glenn Beck and his TV network have reached a settlement with the father of an Irving teen made famous when he was arrested in 2015 after bringing a homemade clock to school.

The undisclosed settlement comes in the wake of recent appeals by Mohamed Mohamed and his son, Ahmed, of a Dallas trial judge's dismissal earlier this year of their libel claims against Beck, The Blaze and commentators Jim Hanson and Ben Shapiro, the legal news service Law360 reported.

The settlement prompted the Fifth Court of Appeals on Tuesday to partially dismiss the Mohameds' appeal, though claims are pending against Shapiro, formerly of Breitbart, and Hanson, of the Center for Security Policy.

Mohamed Mohamed filed defamation complaints against the pundits in September 2016, a year after police escorted his then-14-year-old son out of MacArthur High School and accused him of making a hoax bomb. The family has since moved to Qatar.

Judge Carolyn Wright's dismissal of Beck and The Blaze from the Mohameds' appeal. (Fifth District of Texas)

Mohamed argued that comments made by media personalities and then-Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne led the public to suspect members of his family of terrorism.

District Judge Maricela Moore tossed the Mohameds' claims in January under the Texas Citizens Participation Act, a free-speech law meant to provide for early dismissal of "strategic lawsuits against public participation," otherwise known as SLAPP suits. The Mohameds were ordered to pay more than $270,000 in attorneys' fees to the defendants, Law360 said.

Beck's attorney, Michael Grygiel, told The Dallas Morning News that terms of the settlement were confidential and would not comment further.

Fort Worth attorney Susan Hutchison, who represents the Mohameds, said only that "Mohamed and Glenn Beck and The Blaze were able to resolve their dispute on mutually agreeable terms."

Lawyers for Shapiro and Hanson did not immediately respond to requests for comment.