'We feared for our safety': After Capitol riots, Black, Latino Americans worry about more violence in DC
Romina Ruiz-Goiriena, N'dea Yancey-Bragg and Ryan W. Miller, USA TODAY
Trump's supporters go to the nation's capital as Congress declares Biden president-elect
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WASHINGTON – Bryan Campion-Thompson watched in horror as the city he was born and raised in fell under siege.
As sirens blared past his apartment on Massachusetts Avenue, Campion-Thompson, 30, grew increasingly frightened by what was happening just below. Supporters of President Donald Trump hurled insults and chanted “four more years” refusing to vacate the steps of his building despite a curfew enacted by Mayor Muriel Bowser.