oo question. >> yeah, and what you've provided is, as i said, scary but essentially a reference list that i think a lot of people will use when they -- as people do further reporting on this story, not just in terms of the russian government but in terms of this american connection as well. oren dorell, foreign affairs reporter for "usa today." i really appreciate the work you did and thanks for talking to us about it. >> i will say just to underscore oren's point about people's involvement in or exposing of corruption. one of the things you find again and again as you start following the russian side of this, when there's corruption, large scale corruption, people who are exposed to that corruption from all different sides end up being in danger. not just people who make it publicly known, who investigate it but people who resist it. people who go along with it, profit from it, people who can tell tales about it. everybody who is touched by corruption ends up being in danger. in russia, often that means mortal danger. all right. much more ahead tonight. stay with us.