US prosecutors charged an Afghanistan-born man arrested after weekend attacks in New York and New Jersey with four counts, including use of weapons of mass destruction and bombing a public place, according to a criminal complaint filed on Tuesday.
Investigators were looking for clues as to why Ahmad Khan Rahami (28) might have planted bombs around the New York area over the weekend, including whether the suspect had accomplices or was radicalised overseas.
Rahami was arrested on Monday in Linden, New Jersey, after a gun battle with police.
They were summoned by a neighbourhood bar owner, who found the bombing suspect sleeping against his closed tavern’s front door.
Rahami and two police officers were wounded in the subsequent exchange of gunfire.
The events put New York on edge and fuelled the debate about US security seven weeks before the presidential election, with candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton clashing once again on Monday.
Rahami was suspected of a spate of weekend bombings, including a blast in New York’s crowded Chelsea neighbourhood that wounded 29 people, and two in suburban New Jersey that caused no injuries.
He lived with his family above the First American Fried Chicken restaurant in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
The suspect's foreign trips are coming under scrutiny, with US media reporting that he had travelled to Pakistan and his native Afghanistan multiple times.
Police were looking into whether he was radicalised during that time.
US security sources have confirmed that Rahami underwent secondary screening after returning from foreign travel in recent years and passed on every occasion.
Travellers coming from Afghanistan and Pakistan, which both have a strong Taliban presence, are routinely required to undergo secondary screening.
Rahami’s wife left the US a few days before the bombings, CNN reported on Tuesday, citing a law enforcement source.
Charges
Authorities did not offer any immediate information on the possible motives of Rahami, whom Union County prosecutors charged with five counts of attempted murder in the first degree and two second-degree weapons charges in relation to the shootout.
He was in a critical but stable condition as a result of his wounds, and police had not yet been able to interview him in depth, New York Police Department commissioner James O'Neill said on Tuesday.
O’Neill, who was sworn in as commissioner on Monday, said he was encouraged that officers found Rahami hiding alone.
“It’s a good sign that we found him in a doorway,” Mr O’Neill told CBS. “Hopefully that means he had nowhere to go.”
New York City mayor Bill de Blasio called the Saturday night bombing "an act of terror".
Rahami was also charged with planting a bomb that exploded on the New Jersey shore on Saturday, a device found near the New York blast, and up to six more devices found near the Elizabeth train station on Sunday night.
All of the people injured in Saturday night’s blast have been released from hospitals.
The bombings and subsequent manhunt prompted even greater security in New York.
The largest US city was already on high alert for a gathering of world leaders at the UN in New York for the annual General Assembly this week.
An additional 1,000 officers have been deployed for the event.
The blasts, the manhunt and an apparently unrelated stabbing attack in Minnesota over the weekend created tensions similar to those that followed other recent attacks, such as the mass shootings in Orlando, Florida, and San Bernardino, California.
The Minnesota attacker was described as a “soldier of the Islamic State”, the militant group’s news agency said.
Rahami had not previously been identified as dangerous, but Elizabeth police knew of his family because of late-night noise and crowd complaints at its halal chicken restaurant.
Reuters