New York bombing suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami is in custody after apparently being injured in a shootout with police in Linden, New Jersey.
Footage showed him conscious on a stretcher. Two police officers were injured in the exchange.
Linden is four miles (6km) south-west of the city of Elizabeth, where further devices were found late on Sunday.
Linden Mayor Derek Armstead said the suspect was found by a bar owner sleeping in his hallway.
When a police officer went to investigate and wake him, he realised he resembled the man in the wanted poster, the mayor said.
"Within moments the suspect fired on him. Thank God he had his vest on."
The injured police officers are "ok and safe", Mr Armstead said.
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The 28-year-old Afghan-born US citizen had been named by the FBI as a suspect in Saturday's bombing in Manhattan. His family home in Elizabeth was being searched by officers.
The bombing in the Chelsea district injured 29 people. An unexploded device was found nearby.
Other devices have been found or have exploded in New Jersey over the past few days.
Image copyright AFPEarly on Saturday, a pipe bomb exploded in a shore town ahead of a charity race. No-one was hurt.
One of several devices found in an abandoned backpack near the railway station in Elizabeth exploded as a police robot was trying to disarm it in the early hours of Monday morning.
Local residents in Elizabeth, who had encountered Ahmad Rahami in his work at the family's fried chicken bar, said the family were ordinary and "Americanised".
"He's a very friendly guy, that's what's so scary," said Ryan McCann.
President Barack Obama, speaking in New York, said officials did not believe there was a connection between events in New York and New Jersey and a stabbing attack in Minnesota, also on Saturday, in which nine people were injured.
That attack was apparently carried out by a 22-year-old ethnic Somali.
Mr Obama said it was "extremely fortunate" that nobody was killed in the bombings in New York and New Jersey.
The president said that the US would continue to go after so-called Islamic State (IS).
"We will continue to lead the global coalition and the fight to destroy Isil [IS] which is instigating a lot of people over the internet to carry out attacks," he said.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton urged jittery Americans to be "vigilant but not afraid".
"It is crucial that we continue to build up trust between law enforcement and Muslim American communities," she said.
Her Republican rival for the presidency in November's election, Donald Trump, wrote in a Facebook post: "Hillary Clinton's weakness while she was Secretary of State has emboldened terrorists all over the world to attack the US, even on our own soil.
"They are hoping and praying that Hillary Clinton becomes president - so that they can continue their savagery and murder," Mr Trump said.