New charges boost case against New Jersey man in bombings

The additional charges could subject Ahmad Rahimi to life in prison if he's convicted for bombings that injured 30 people in Manhattan and New Jersey.

Ahmad Khan Rahami, accused of carrying out bombing attacks in New York and New Jersey in September, 2016, is shown in this courtroom sketch with attorney David Patton (L) and Peggy Cross-Goldenberg, as he appears in federal court to face charges in Manhattan, New York, U.S., November 10, 2016.

Jane Rosenberg/Reuters

November 16, 2016

Federal prosecutors boosted their case Wednesday against a man charged with setting off bombs in New Jersey and New York that injured 30 people, bringing additional charges in an indictment and subjecting him to a potential mandatory life-in-prison penalty if he's convicted.

The eight-count indictment in Manhattan federal court speeds the case along against 28-year-old Ahmad Khan Rahimi. He has been held without bail in the Sept. 17 attacks since his arrest two days afterward when he was shot by police in a shootout outside a Linden, New Jersey, bar.

The bombings included the evening explosion of a bomb in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood that injured 30 people and the detonation of a pipe bomb along a Marine Corps Charity race in Seaside Park, New Jersey, earlier in the day.

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Mr. Rahimi is scheduled to enter a plea to the indictment during a court appearance Thursday.

The new bombing charges in the indictment were added to charges already lodged against him in a federal complaint in New York. If convicted of all counts, he would face a mandatory life prison sentence.

He also faces the potential for a mandatory life prison sentence in a case brought against him in Union County, New Jersey. Authorities announced Wednesday that a grand jury there had handed up an indictment charging Rahimi with 30 counts, including attempted murder of a law enforcement officer, aggravated assault and weapons offenses stemming from the Sept. 19 shootout. He is charged with shooting one officer in his protective vest. Another officer was struck in the head by a bullet fragment. Neither injury was life threatening.

One of his lawyers said at an initial appearance for the Elizabeth, New Jersey, resident last week in Manhattan, where he will face trial first, that he will plead not guilty to any federal indictment. Assistant federal defender Sabrina Shroff declined to comment after the indictment was returned Wednesday.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara noted the Chelsea bombing shattered windows hundreds of yards away and propelled a 100-pound dumpster more than 120 feet.

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Until last week, Rahimi remained in a New Jersey hospital or jail facility recovering from his gunshot wounds.

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Associated Press writers Dave Porter in Newark, New Jersey, and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this story.