i can t quite believe that members of congress don t care about the fortunes of their family members. reporter: and the fortunes go both ways. mike rogers wife christin becomes ceo of defense contractor, then is hired by a lobbying firm. rogers becomes chairman of the house intelligence committee, and according to the federal election commission, political donations from the d the defense industry quadruple. all legal, within the rules, all routine in the family business of washington. drew joins us now. drew as you said, this is all somewhat routine in washington. almost taken for granted. but the numbers are astounding. 100 families of congressman are registered lobbyists? so normal inside the beltway we hear the same thing every time we go there. this is old news to them. they don t think there s anything wrong. d.c. is a family town. these family connections are very important. and the examples are everywhere you look, both parties. it s why people elected to office when the
time we go there. this is old news to them. they don t think there s anything wrong. d.c. is a family town. these family connections are very important. and the examples are everywhere you look, both parties. it s why people elected to office when they leave office they don t leave washington. unbelievable. drew, thanks very much. olympic skier bode miller breaks down that post-race interview on nbc. you probably heard about this. when asked repeatedly about his late brother. the question is did the reporter go too far? bode miller talks to our rachel nichols next. takes 200,000 par, 800,000 hours of supercomputing time, 3 million lines of code, 40,000 sets of eyes, or a million sleepless nights. whether it s building the world s most advanced satellite, the space station, or the next leap in unmanned systems. at boeing, one thing never changes. our passion to make it real.
were able to make it over there and they were fine. your oldest daughter was the kindergarten at plaza towers elementary and the sirens wailed. what is her story? she was freaked out. she said the school fell down and she got a couple of scrapes and scratches, nothing too serious. but the most important thinges she is excited no more school for the next couple of days. shepard: where will you guys be? how will you exist? as a family, i guess. we have family town in norman, andded mondes, so we ll just stay together and rebuild. shepard: wonder for parents, sometimes kids go through something like this and the days ahead are hard. what your oldest daughter, who lived through the collapse of that school, able to sleep last
had she run off with scott? was this her little rebellion against her father s grounding rules? where could cindy be, missing now for more than 12 hours? at that point, we were still hoping that she had just spent the night at somebody s house. and i remember my mom coming into the room saying, do you know where cindy is? she said, if you know anything, you better spill it. now, your 13-year-old self-were you wondering where she was? i was concerned right away, yeah. but on the bright side, this was east detroit with the motto a family town. bad stuff happened in the big city nearby, not here. you didn t hear about that in east detroit, you heard about it in other states. and so when you re 13, you think you re untouchable. still, that sunday night, the phone didn t ring. cindy s bed stayed empty. it was panic. you knew that there was something wrong. her mom wanted everyone to just take a deep breath. it s not like jaws where you ve got the little music