Rahami called ‘friendly,’ but changed after foreign travels
To neighbours and customers of his family’s storefront chicken takeout, Ahmad Khan Rahami was a friendly, quiet presence behind the counter who liked talking about cars and was generous with free food.
So when the 28-year-old Afghan immigrant was apprehended Monday as the lead person of interest in bombings in New York and New Jersey, those who knew him expressed shock, questioning whether his turn to religiosity in recent years might have hinted at views otherwise kept hidden.
Rahami’s father and brothers had long nursed tensions with neighbours and officials in Elizabeth, New Jersey, over the restaurant’s late hours, a conflict the family claimed in a lawsuit was the result of discrimination against them as Muslims.
But Ahmad Rahami’s demeanour — increasingly devout but more likely to talk about worldly pursuits than his faith — never hinted at anything but goodwill, customers said.

