The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Warrant: Mom hospitaliz­ed during trip with former Conn. CNN producer

- By Peter Yankowski

A Nevada woman was twice hospitaliz­ed during a weeklong visit to a former CNN producer’s Vermont ski home where they trained her adopted 9-year-old daughter to be “sexually submissive,” according to the mother’s arrest warrant.

The 48-year-old woman, whose name Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group is withholdin­g to protect her daughter’s identity, has been charged in Nevada with two counts each of sexual assault of a minor under 14 and first-degree child abuse as well as three counts of lewdness with a minor under 14.

The woman was arrested in August 2020, about a month after she and her daughter made a crosscount­ry trip to John Griffin’s ski home in Ludlow, Vt., arrest warrants stated. The woman, whose attorney could not be reached for comment, has pleaded not guilty to the charges and is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday in Henderson, Nev.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion arrested Griffin in New Haven last week on an indictment, charging him with three counts of using a facility of interstate commerce to attempt to entice minors to engage in unlawful sexual activity, the U.S. attorney’s office for the district of Vermont said.

The woman’s eight-page arrest warrant includes text messages describing her visit to Griffin’s home, references to sexually explicit photos the girl was forced to take of the woman, and interviews with the girl, her biological mother and her grandmothe­r, who was assigned temporary custody of the child.

Griffin, 44, of Stamford, has been accused of trying to lure women and their daughters to his ski home to sexually “train” the underage girls, according to his indictment.

Griffin’s attorney, Joseph Martini, said he and his client will not be commenting on the case.

In a statement to Hearst Connecticu­t Media, CNN said Griffin was fired Monday from the network, where he had worked since 2013, according to his LinkedIn profile. Griffin was once a producer for the Chris Cuomo show and was most recently a producer for CNN senior political analyst John Avlon.

Investigat­ors said Griffin paid more than $3,000 for the Nevada woman to fly with her daughter to Boston, where he picked them up and drove them to his Vermont house in July 2020, the indictment stated.

The investigat­ion into Griffin began in August 2020 after the Nevada woman contacted local police about a custody dispute she was having with her daughter’s biological mother, according to her arrest warrant obtained by Hearst Connecticu­t Media.

Police in Henderson, Nev., contacted the girl’s biological mother, who said she discovered a series of text messages the woman sent from her daughter’s phone to another man describing their trip to Vermont and how she engaged the child in sexual activity, the warrant stated. The girl’s biological mother said the woman used the girl’s phone to send text messages and log onto social media and email.

“Trip had some great moments and then me (in) the hospital twice,” the woman texted the man, according to the warrant.

The warrant states that it’s “unknown” why the woman was hospitaliz­ed.

In August 2020, the biological mother contacted Griffin, who said the woman was hospitaliz­ed in Boston and denied anything happened with the girl while he was alone with her at his Vermont home, the warrant stated.

However, during the first three nights of the trip, the girl told police she was forced to engage in sexual activity with Griffin and her adoptive mother, the warrant stated.

“(The girl) stated that the remaining nights in Vermont, she did not want to participat­e in what (her adoptive mother) and John were doing, so she stayed in another room while they went to the basement,” the warrant stated.

The girl also told police she was forced to watch as her adoptive mother have sex with at least three other men between March 2020 and the trip to Vermont in July of that year, the warrant stated.

In the arrest warrant, Henderson police stated they charged the adoptive mother for the alleged incidents in Vermont because she committed acts in Nevada “with the intent, partial execution, and which culminated in the commission of a crime that occurred in the state of Vermont.”

Less than two weeks after the woman was charged in August 2020, federal investigat­ors seized Griffin’s computers and other electronic devices, according to his indictment.

Federal authoritie­s have not responded to questions about why it took more than a year for charges to be filed against Griffin. A spokespers­on for the FBI Albany field office declined to comment Friday, citing the ongoing investigat­ion.

Ludlow Police Chief Jeffrey Billings said Griffin is not facing state charges in Vermont and referred questions to federal authoritie­s.

Griffin is also accused of trying to lure two other women and their daughters between April and June 2020 to his Vermont home, which he purchased for $1.8 million in February 2020.

The purchase was made using an LLC that included Griffin and his estranged wife, Allyson Griffin. A personal attorney for Allyson Griffin said the couple has been separated for two years and declined to comment about the charges her estranged husband is facing.

Norwalk property records indicate the couple purchased a $3.6 million home in the Rowayton section of the city in 2017. At the time of his arrest, John Griffin was a Stamford resident, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. It’s not clear when he moved and his name does not appear on Stamford property records.

According to his indictment, investigat­ors claimed Griffin chatted online with people he believed were the parents of minor children, and tried to persuade them “to allow him to train their daughters to be sexually submissive,” the indictment stated.

During several chat conversati­ons over Kik and Google Hangouts in 2020, Griffin stated that he believed “a woman is a woman regardless of her age,” according to the indictment.

“During these chat conversati­ons, John Griffin espoused a ‘way of life’ in which women are sexually subservien­t and inferior to men,” the indictment stated. “Using Kik and Google Hangouts, John Griffin sought parents who would allow him to train their minor daughters to be sexually subservien­t.”

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