KEY POINTS
  • Police response to Wednesday’s siege on the U.S. Capitol is coming under growing fire. Critics include President-elect Joe Biden, who called the treatment of rioters a double standard.
  • Former FBI special agent Erroll Southers said that the behavior of some law enforcement officers during Wednesday’s siege on the U.S. Capitol invoked memories of Charlottesville and Kenosha. 
  • The FBI produced a report that warned about the infiltration of white nationalists in local law enforcement in 2006. Southers said that the siege of the U.S. Capitol illustrates the situation has since been exacerbated.

Former FBI special agent Erroll Southers told CNBC's "The News with Shepard Smith" that the behavior of some law enforcement during Wednesday's siege on the U.S. Capitol invoked memories of Charlottesville and Kenosha. 

"It invokes for me memories back to 2017 and Charlottesville when one of the persons part of the Unite the Right movement discharged a firearm and walked past the police, said Southers, who is currently the Director of Homegrown Violent Extremism Studies at the University of Southern California. "It brings back images of Kenosha after that individual killed two people and slung his AR-15 over his shoulder and walked by the police officers who sat him down and got him some water. It's very clear what's going on here."

Police response to Wednesday's siege on the U.S. Capitol is coming under growing fire. Critics include President-elect Joe Biden, who called the treatment of rioters a double standard.