If a riot breaks out, and no-one talks about it, did it actually take place ?

DC Police won’t talk about it.   DC Media won’t report on it.   It does not fit the currently allowed narrative.   However, it did happen….

 …..and failing to recognize the existence of crime does not protect you from it.

The only reporting on the event comes from the student newspaper at George Washington University.    Move along, move along folks…. nothing to see here…. move along.
WASHINGTON DC – The Metropolitan Police Department responded to a mob of 60 young people who were jumping on cars and vandalizing the area near the Watergate complex Monday, according to its public information office.
https://twitter.com/mar_erin/statuses/458409129024172032
City police received a call at 7:12 p.m. reporting that about 60 teenagers were jumping on cars between 25th St. and Virginia Ave. Officers also deployed to the 800 block of New Hampshire Ave. after hearing of destruction of property there at 7:21 p.m.
No arrests were made, MPD spokesman Paul Metcalf said. A nearby resident, Trey O’Callaghan, said he saw officers question two young men, who had been handcuffed, about an hour after the group passed by.
Witnesses said at least a dozen law enforcement vehicles blocked off the streets surrounding near the Watergate. Police vehicles sped down Virginia Avenue toward the Watergate, where witnesses said they had seen a boisterous crowd of dozens of young people.
Brandon Morris, who lives at 24th and H streets, said he watched police officers order two men to get on the ground around 8:30 p.m. He had also seen the large group shouting as they marched toward the Watergate.
“The shouting seemed angry, then celebratory, almost like a sporting event,” he said.

University spokeswoman Maralee Csellar said the University Police Department has no records of vandalism to GW facilities or the Foggy Bottom Metro station.
Dan Stessel, the Transit police spokesman, said the office did not receive reports of criminal activity in Foggy Bottom.
In recent months, there have been reports across the country about “robbery flash mobs,” where groups use social media to organize large, disruptive events. Last month, about a dozen teenagers robbed a True Religion clothing store on M Street, stealing thousands of dollars worth of jeans in several minutes.   (READ MORE)

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