different. when campaigns start, you take a look at opposition research. you want to find out everything and anything you can on your opponent and you want to use that stuff against them. most all the time, it's political, it's a vote they've made, a position they've taken, but something like mental health as we're talking about the gun debate and the importance and seriousness of mental health, that's nothing to be used as a political pinata, nothing to attack your opponent on. i think it's pretty nasty and quite frankly reprehensible for a campaign to do so. >> karen, the mcconnell campaign has told mother jones quote, obviously recording device of some kind was placed in senator mcconnell's campaign office without consent. by whom and how that was accomplished, will presumably be the subject of a criminal investigation. kentucky is a one party consent state. obviously it's illegal, completely illegal, if you are not a party to the conversation to begin with. so there needs to be a lot of vetting done to this. but the senator's office is asking the fbi now to get