LOS ANGELES â Author Amy Griffin sued a former classmate for defamation on Monday, saying the womanâs statements in a New York Times story and a subsequent lawsuit alleging Griffin appropriated her stories of sexual abuse for her bestselling 2025 memoir âThe Tellâ are false in âevery element.â
Griffinâs lawsuit, filed in federal court in Nevada, says that in 2025 her former middle school classmate âtold The New York Times â and through it, the world â that Amy Griffin is a fraud and a thief.â
The lawsuit says that in the womanâs telling, âMrs. Griffin stole the rape of another woman and built a bestseller on it.â
A Times spokesperson said the lawsuit misrepresents its story and reporting. The former classmate said her account will prove true in court.
In âThe Tell,â a hit that became an Oprahâs Book Club selection, Griffin, a venture capitalist and memoirist, recounts being sexually abused as a child by a teacher at her middle school in Amarillo, Texas, and writes that years later she recovered memories of the experience by undergoing therapy using the psychedelic drug MDMA.
The Times story published six months after the book included stories from a classmate who said some of Griffinâs experiences were eerily similar to her own. Then in March the woman filed a lawsuit in California state court, which Griffin is fighting and seeking to have dismissed.
The Associated Press doesnât typically name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they come forward publicly or otherwise consent. The woman who sued Griffin filed her lawsuit as Jane Doe, and her name did not appear in the Times story.
Griffin says documentation backs her in every aspect
Griffinâs lawsuit says the most essential fact is that she put her account of her abuse in writing in 2020, and in 2021 she provided another detailed and documented account in an interview with the Amarillo Police Department. Both accounts match up with the book, and both came before Griffin is alleged to have extracted the womanâs abuse story by having someone posing as a talent agent call her in 2022, according to the lawsuit. The statute of limitations prevented the criminal investigation from moving forward.
Griffinâs lawsuit says the woman falsely claimed to be another middle school classmate who appears in âThe Tellâ under the pseudonym âClaudia,â whose meeting with the author is recounted in the book. The lawsuit Griffin had not talked to the woman in more than 35 years, had never been part of the same church youth group as alleged, and was demonstrably not in the Palm Springs area in 2019 â or the years before or after â when the woman claims the two of them met for coffee.
Griffinâs lawsuit says the coffee shop conversation with âClaudiaâ took place thousands of miles away in the presence of a collaborator, and that the woman in the Times story had been unable to produce any evidence the meeting with her had taken place.
âAmy Griffinâs accuser has had every opportunity to set the record straight,â Griffinâs lawyer Tom Clare said in a statement to the AP on Tuesday. âThis lawsuitâs purpose is to make the truth known. The New York Times knowingly promoted her false allegations and must also be held accountable.â
Accuser says this is an attempt to silence her
In an email to The Associated Press sent through her lawyers, the woman said the shame and humiliation from her sexual assault were unimaginable and she was âviolated all over again after reading about my own experiences in Amyâs book.â
âDespite trying to remain anonymous, Amy has now chosen to use her immense wealth and influence to try and silence me,â the email said. âShe has had her lawyers identify me publicly as well as sue me. I am shocked and disappointed that she would choose to take this route, especially since she herself knows the truth.â
Griffinâs attorneys said in filings that the womanâs attorneys gave them her name â which they have used unredacted in exhibits that theyâve shared â and have not proceeded with the case anonymously under California law.
Griffinâs lawsuit seeks a declaration that the allegations that she stole the womanâs abuse stories are false, along with financial damages to be determined at trial.
New York Times stands by its reporting and story
Griffinâs lawsuit, while not naming the Times as a defendant, is harshly critical of the paper, saying it âdeemed the story too good to scrutinizeâ despite Griffinâs lawyers making it clear the womanâs account was âdemonstrably false.â
Times spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha said in an email to the AP that the lawsuit and related filings ârepeatedly misrepresent The New York Times story and its reporting,â and that the article âis markedly different in key aspects put forthâ in both womenâs lawsuits.
Rhoades points out that many of the allegations Griffin is pushing back against did not appear in the Timesâ story, including that the woman they spoke to was âClaudia,â or that a person posing as a talent agent on Griffinâs behalfâŠ
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