Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Suspect shot, captured in N.Y.-area bombings

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LINDEN, N.J. >> A New Jersey police officer responding to a call about a hoodied vagrant curled up asleep in a bar doorway roused him and quickly recognized the bearded face of perhaps the most wanted man in America.

Ahmad Khan Rahami — identified in an FBI bulletin just hours earlier as a man wanted in the weekend bombings in New York City and New Jersey — pulled a gun, shot the officer and triggered a running gun battle in the street that ended with Rahami wounded and in custody Monday, authoritie­s said.

A bloodied Rahami was loaded into the back of an ambulance, just 50 hours after the first blast that started it all.

Rahami, 28, a naturalize­d U.S. citizen from Afghanista­n who lived with his Muslim family in Elizabeth, New Jersey, underwent surgery for a gunshot wound to the leg as authoritie­s began drawing up charges in a case that spread fear across the New York area and revived anxiety about homegrown terrorism.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said officials have every reason to believe the series of bombings “was an act of terror,” though investigat­ors said Rahami’s exact motive isn’t yet clear.

With Rahami’s arrest, officials said they have no indication there are more bombs or suspects to find, though they cautioned that they are still investigat­ing.

Still, after a whirlwind investigat­ion that put Rahami in custody in just two days’ time, “I’m a lot happier today than I was yesterday,” New York City Police Commission­er James O’Neill said.

The probe started when a pipe bomb blew up Saturday morning in Seaside Park, New Jersey, before a charity race to benefit Marines. No one was injured.

Then a shrapnel-packed pressure-cooker bomb similar to those used in the Boston Marathon attack exploded Saturday night in New York’s Chelsea section, wounding 29 people, none seriously. An unexploded pressure-cooker bomb was found blocks away.

Late Sunday night, five explosive devices were discovered in a trash can at an Elizabeth train station. Investigat­ors said they are still gathering evidence and have not publicly tied Rahami to those devices.

Late Monday, a hospitaliz­ed Rahami was charged in New Jersey with five counts of attempted murder of police officers in connection with the shootout and was held on $5.2 million bail. Federal prosecutor­s said they were still weighing charges over the bombings.

It wasn’t known if Rahami had an attorney. Messages left for family members were not immediatel­y returned.

Rahami lived with his family above their friedchick­en restaurant in Elizabeth, and his relatives have clashed with the city over closing times and noise complaints they said were tinged with anti-Muslim sentiment. A childhood friend, Flee Jones, said Rahami had become more religious after returning from a trip to Afghanista­n several years ago. Still, some of the family restaurant’s customers said that while Rahami was devout, he was more likely to talk about his interest in cars than to mention faith.

William Sweeney Jr., the FBI’s assistant director in New York, said there were no indication­s Rahami was on law enforcemen­t’s radar at the time of the bombings.

Authoritie­s zeroed in on him as the potential bomber after a fingerprin­t and DNA obtained from one of the New York sites and “clear as day” surveillan­ce video from the bombing scene helped identify him, according to three law enforcemen­t officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.

Five people were pulled over Sunday night in a vehicle associated with Rahami but were questioned and released, Sweeney said, declining to say whether they might later face charges. The law enforcemen­t officials said at least one of Rahami’s relatives was in the car, which appeared headed toward Kennedy Airport in New York after coming from New Jersey.

Linden Mayor Derek Armstead said the break in the case came late Monday morning, when a bar owner reported someone asleep in his doorway.

Jack Mazza, co-manager of nearby V.C.M.R. Truck Services, said the bar owner came over exclaiming about the sleeping man, and Mazza walked over to see a man curled up with a sweatshirt hood pulled over his head in the rain.

“He looked like a bum,” Mazza said.

After an officer arrived and recognized Rahami, Rahami shot the officer, who was saved by his bulletproo­f vest, authoritie­s said. More officers joined in a gun battle that spilled into the street.

Another police officer was grazed by a bullet. Authoritie­s said neither officers’ injuries were life-threatenin­g.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police officers stand on Elizabeth Avenue in Linden, N.J., near where an Afghan immigrant wanted for questionin­g in the bombings that rocked a New York City neighborho­od and a New Jersey shore town was taken into custody Monday after being wounded in a...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police officers stand on Elizabeth Avenue in Linden, N.J., near where an Afghan immigrant wanted for questionin­g in the bombings that rocked a New York City neighborho­od and a New Jersey shore town was taken into custody Monday after being wounded in a...
 ??  ?? Ahmad Khan Rahami
Ahmad Khan Rahami

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