Father of New York area bombing suspect reported son to police in 2014

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The father of the Afghan-born man arrested after bombings in New York and New Jersey says he reported concerns about his son to the FBI in 2014.
A conscious man believed to be New York bombing suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami is loaded into an ambulance after a shoot-out with police in New Jersey on Sept 19, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON (NYTIMES) - Two years before Ahmad Khan Rahami went on a bombing rampage in New York and New Jersey, his father told police that the son was a terrorist, prompting a review by federal agents, according to two senior law enforcement officials.

Separately on Tuesday (Sept 20), another official said that when Rahami was captured during a shootout with police, he was carrying a notebook that contained writings sympathetic to Islamic militant causes.

In one section of the book, which was pierced by a bullethole and covered in blood, Rahami wrote of "killing the kuffar," or unbeliever, according to the official, who agreed to speak about the investigation only on the condition of anonymity.

After Rahami was captured on Monday morning, ending one of the largest manhunts in the city's history, investigators turned their focus to what might have motivated, inspired or led him to plant bombs in Chelsea in Manhattan and on the Jersey Shore.

Officials are also looking at whether he had any assistance in building the bombs or if anyone knew what he was doing and failed to report it.

Of particular interest to authorities is a series of trips Rahami made to Pakistan, once staying for nearly a year.

The father made the statement about his son being a terrorist to New Jersey police in 2014, when Rahami was arrested after a domestic dispute and accused of stabbing his brother.

The information was passed to the Joint Terrorism Task Force led by the FBI in Newark, New Jersey.

Officers opened what is known as an assessment, the most basic of FBI investigations, and interviewed the father, who then recanted.

An official, when asked about the inquiry, said the father made the comment out of anger at his son.

It is not clear if officers interviewed Ahmad Rahami.

On Tuesday morning, outside the family's restaurant in Elizabeth, the father, Mohammad Rahami, told reporters, "I called the FBI two years ago," he said, shaking his fingers in the air.

Asked if he specifically meant his son, Mohammad Rahami stormed away.

A short time later, he responded to a reporter who asked, "Do you think your son is a terrorist?"

"No," Mohammad Rahami said. "And the FBI, they know that."

Ahmad Rahami spent over three months in jail on charges related to the domestic dispute, according to a high-ranking law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation. A grand jury, however, declined to indict Rahami.

Assistant director William F. Sweeney, who heads the FBI's New York office, alluded on Monday at a news conference to a "domestic incident" in which he said the "allegations were recanted."

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