CNN Analyst: Oregon Militia Isn't As Bad As Black Protesters Because 'They Aren't Looting Anything'
CNN law enforcement analyst Art Roderick said over the weekend that armed protesters who took over a federal building in Oregon were not being treated harshly like Black Lives Matter protesters and Muslims would be because they were "not looting anything."
CNN law enforcement analyst Art Roderick said over the weekend that armed protesters who took over a federal building in Oregon were not being treated harshly like Black Lives Matter protesters and Muslims would be because they were "not looting anything."
On Saturday, an armed group of militiamen and members of Cliven Bundy's family seized the Malheur Wildlife Refuge headquarters to protest sentences against two ranchers who were convicted of setting wildfires.
Roderick told CNN host Brian Stelter on Sunday that law enforcement should not react with force to end the militia's occupation of the federal building.
"The last thing we need is some type of large confrontation because that's when stuff goes bad," Roderick explained. "And I think in this particular instance, if we just wait them out, see what they've got to say, then eventually, they're all going to go home."
Stelter pointed out that many activists had complained if the militia members were "Black Lives Matter protesters or if these were peaceful Muslim Americans [then] they would be treated very differently by law enforcement."
"This is a very rural area," Roderick replied. "It is out in the middle of nowhere. What are they actually doing? They're not destroying property, they're not looting anything."
"I mean, there's a whole separate situation going on as to exactly why they're there and that will be worked out through the legal process," he continued. "But I think now that they've taken over this location out at the fish and wildlife, this brings in the federal side. And I know the federal government has learned over the years how to deal with these types of incidences."