New York

Linden Cop Hurt in Shootout With Bombing Suspect Visits New Jersey School, Thanks Students for Cards

Asked by one student how scared he was during the confrontation, Angel Padilla said he was "a bit nervous"

A police officer wounded in a shootout with the man charged with setting off bombs in New York City and New Jersey visited a school Thursday to thank students for their well wishes.

What to Know

  • Angel Padilla was one of two Linden police officers wounded in a shootout with bombing suspect Ahmad Rahami Monday
  • Padilla was shot in the torso, but he was wearing a bulletproof vest, saving him from more serious injury
  • The other shot officer, Pete Hammer, had a graze wound to the head and was released from the hospital a day after Padilla

A Linden police officer injured in a shootout with the man suspected of setting off bombs in New York and New Jersey visited a school Thursday to thank students for their well wishes, calling the students his "heroes."

Patrolman Angel Padilla visited Linden School No. 5, where his grandson attends and where he volunteers with the school's PTA.

One of the fifth grade students in the class asked Padilla how scared he was when he confronted the suspect. 

"How scared was I? I was nervous. A bit nervous," Padilla said.

Students at the school wrote get well cards for Padilla and officer Pete Hammer, who were both hurt in Monday's shootout. The children hunched intently over their desks Thursday, putting the finishing touches on their notes.

One said, "Our Hero's Officer Padilla and Officer Hammer Protect and Respect," with a drawing of the American flag. Another girl held up a drawing of a stick figure officer next to a heart, with the words, "Officer Padilla Love You" atop.  

NBC 4 New York
Students said they were excited to make the cards for the injured officers.

But it was Padilla who called the children his heroes as he vowed to come back to play basketball and attend the school book fair. Kids lined up to hug the officer before he left as his colleagues thanked the children for their support.

"I just want to say, 'Thank you,' for catching a guy who made a bad decision," one little girl said. 

Padilla was shot in the torso, but his bulletproof vest saved him from a more serious injury. Hammer was grazed in the head by a bullet or shrapnel.

Both officers were treated at a hospital and have since been released.

One of the Linden police officers injured during the takedown of terror suspect Ahmad Rahami left the hospital today to cheers. Lori Bordonaro reports.

Ahmad Rahami, the 28-year-old naturalized citizen from Afghanistan who faces federal terror charges in the bombings, is also accused of multiple counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer in the Linden shootout. He remains hospitalized in Newark recovering from at least 10 gunshot wounds. 

Though Rahami has been charged federally, he is still in state custody in New Jersey on the shootout-related charges. A Manhattan U.S. magistrate judge refused Rahami's public defender's request Wednesday to have him arraigned on the federal charges until that changes. U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch said he would be moved to New York in "the near future."

Rahami's wife, who was overseas at the time of the attacks, returned to the United States early Thursday and is cooperating with authorities, law enforcement officials say. She is not considered a suspect in the case.

Rahami has not cooperated with law enforcement officials who tried to question him at the hospital, authorities have said. A blood-stained journal found in his possession when he was captured, though, paints a chilling picture of a man rife with anti-U.S. sentiment who praised leaders of terror groups and wanted to make a martyr of himself. 

New York bombing suspect Ahmad Rahami after being shot in a gun battle with Linden, NJ police, Sept. 19, 2016.
Bombing suspect Ahmad Rahmani is seen with scenes from bombings in Seaside Park, Chelsea and Elizabeth.
A bomb found in Elizabeth, NJ on Sept. 18, 2016 explodes while the bomb squad attempts to disarm it.
Authorities search the space above a fried chicken restaurant in Elizabeth, NJ on Sept. 19, 2016 after a bomb was discovered nearby.
Members of the FBI investigate the scene the morning after the explosion. Officials believe there is no connection to the explosion that happened in Seaside Park, New Jersey, on Saturday morning.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo released a statement and said that his administration is "monitoring the situation". He also urged New Yorkers to "as always, remain calm and vigilant".
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New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left, and Mayor Bill de Blasio walk towards the scene of an explosion on West 23rd street in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, in New York, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2016, after an incident that injured passers-by Saturday evening.
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Firefighters arrive at the scene of an explosion in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, in New York, Saturday, Sept. 17, 2016.
NBC 4 New York
A law enforcement source said the explosion appeared to have come from a large construction-site toolbox on 23rd.
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People stand behind police lines as firefighters, emergency workers and police gather at the scene of an explosion in Manhattan on Sept. 17, 2016 in New York City.
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Police, firefighters and emergency workers gather at the scene of an explosion in Manhattan on Sept. 17, 2016, in New York City.
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Mayor Bill de Blasio, center, and NYPD Chief of Department James O'Neill, left, react during a press conference near the scene of an explosion on West 23rd street in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, in New York, Saturday, Sept. 17, 2016.
AP
In this Saturday, Sept. 17, 2016, frame from video provided by Orangetheory Fitness Chelsea, a door shatters after an explosion in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York. Investigators scrambled Sunday to find out who planted a bomb that rocked Chelsea, scouring shrapnel, forensic traces and surveillance video.
@voicehalf
A photo from the scene showed the toolbox blown apart, with bits of debris scattered on the street.
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People try to access the area near the scene of an explosion on West 23rd Street and 6th Avenue in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, in New York, early Sunday, Sept. 18, 2016.
AP
Police officers look for suspicious packages along Fifth Avenue near the scene of an explosion on West 23rd Street and 6th Avenue in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood in New York, early Sunday, Sept. 18, 2016.
Law enforcement sources identify this pressure cooker, with wires and a phone attached, as the device found on 27th St. in Manhattan following an explosion on 23rd St. on Sept. 17, 2016.
Ted Greenberg, NBC 10
Pipe Bomb exploded in Seaside Park today in a trashcan.
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Dakota DeFelice
Police at 23rd Street and First Avenue on Monday, just days after a bomb went off several blocks away.
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