The 13th Step - Epilogue: Employee A
Episode Date: June 6, 2023A conversation with one of the women whose story of sexual assault you heard earlier in this podcast. She talks with Lauren about what it was like to hear her story published, the legal threats she ha...s faced from Eric Spofford and his lawyers, and why she decided to speak out in the first place.The 13th Step is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio’s Document team. More at 13thsteppodcast.org.
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This is the 13th step. I'm Lauren Chulgin, and the episode you are about to hear, the
epilogue, it was not in our original plan. We were all pretty confident that we were
going to wrap things up in six episodes, but that all changed, because I had a conversation
recently that I really wasn't expecting to have, but I'm really glad I did.
One of the last things I had to do before we published was reach out to all my sources
to let them know that the podcast was coming so they could prepare.
And when I reached out to employee A, she texted back and she said she wanted to talk.
Employee A, you'll remember, used to work for Eric Spofford at Granite Recovery Centers.
The first time she and I talked was December of 2020,
a lifetime ago.
That's when she told me that her boss, Eric,
sent her sexually explicit messages on Snapchat
and that he sexually assaulted her in his office
in the middle of the work day.
Did you want that to happen?
No.
But I also didn't know how to tell him.
No.
I corroborated what employee told me with other sources,
but Eric denies that it happened.
I first published a story about employee A in March of 2022.
And since then, we've been in touch on and off, but it would totally make sense if she never wanted to talk to me again.
First of all, Eric's lawyers have made life hard for her. They've sent her intimidating letters threatening to sue her.
And also, sexual assault and harassment are traumatic. For employee A and other sources in this podcast, having to be reminded of that trauma every
time they see my name pop up on their phone, that's really rough.
That's why it was so remarkable that just a few weeks before we put out this podcast,
employee A came to the NHPR newsroom.
We sat down together in a studio and we caught up. When you and I talked the first first time,
we only talked about like this one bad thing that happened to you,
and I was just wondering,
is there anything you want people to know?
What should people know about you?
I mean, I grew up in a small town in New Hampshire
with my younger sister,
and we went through life with an alcoholic mom and we built our connection based off of that pretty much.
Are you still close with your sister?
Oh yeah. Then she just had a baby and she's the most precious thing on the planet.
Oh that's so fun. Is this your first niece or your niece?
Oh my god. The best.
Yeah. That's the best.
It's just full of snuggles and she's so God. The best. Yeah.
That's the best.
So it's just full of snuggles and she's so cute.
She came out perfect.
Do you want to share anything about your work or anything else?
Not really.
Okay.
Only because of everything.
Gotcha.
Yeah.
Let's talk about when the story first came out.
Yeah.
What was that like?
Where were you when you heard it? I was just at home listening to it. The biggest thing was that when I got to work
everyone heard it, but it was it was a sense of like freedom in a sense like
that it's out there. Like, yeah, same more about that. It's just like, I just don't want him to be able to do this to anybody else.
Or at least the women out there to know that, like, that's what he does, you know?
And that's all I want is for people to know. I don't think that he should be in the recovery field, like, and pray on
people who are vulnerable in any sense of the way, you know.
Employee A told me that hearing that another woman, the one we call Elizabeth,
had received really similar snapchats from Eric. That was incredibly powerful for her.
I mentioned in episode two that Eric denies any of this ever happened. In the lawsuit, he says that
employee A and Elizabeth are dishonest, unreliable, and motivated to harm his reputation.
Employee A says she doesn't know Elizabeth, but she says the similarities in their stories reinforce their credibility.
The fact that we say pretty much the same exact thing is crazy and that's like I'm glad that I don't know them and I don't,
I wouldn't even be able to recognize them because if anything did go further, like, I don't know who these people are.
Like, you can't tell me that I made up the story with this girl who I don't know, you know?
So, it was, that part was super powerful for me in the fact that, like,
but also I felt terrible because I, like, I don't want that stuff to happen to anybody else you know I
felt bad for the other women and all of that stuff who who have been living
with that for so long too. And when we first talked you had said I'm okay being
recorded but I don't want my name used which is obviously what we're doing
right now. Can you walk me through why that was your decision?
So it actually, one, I didn't realize how recognizable
my voice was. Really?
But that's okay.
But regardless, like, my name was never put out there
and yet he knew exactly who was on the recordings, you know, which how is
it that the first names that pop into your head are us, you know? Like if none of this is
true for whatever he says, how is it that our names are popping up first in your mind?
Were you nervous when you realized how recognizable your voice was?
Um, for like a second, but then I was like, I'm whatever.
It is what it is.
I feel like your vibe is very like, it is what it is.
I think that's serving you well in this situation.
And so the day the story came out, we talked in the pool, it was the day you got the letter
that we talked.
And you said that people had said some like kind of empowering nice things to you after the story came out. we talked in the pool, it was the day you got the letter that we talked. And you said that people had said some kind of empowering, nice things to you after the
story came out.
Do you remember that?
What did they say?
Just the fact that like how strong I was, how strong all of us were, and I had text messages
from people who I worked with in the past that would text me and say finally it's finally it's out finally somebody saying something and all of that stuff
So that felt good, but
At the same time like I didn't know where this was gonna go so I didn't want I didn't want too much conversation around it
But with them, but
It felt good to get the the text messages and all of that stuff, yeah.
Were you proud of yourself? Yeah, yeah, I was. Like I said, I didn't I didn't
necessarily know where this was gonna go. Like for all I knew, it was gonna go
nowhere because that's what I know from the past. So yeah, it was I was proud of all of us not just myself
What she knows from the past I wasn't the first person to hear employee a story
There are two big moments that employee a defines as the times she already came forward
She told people who she thought could help her and then nothing
The way she describes it is the times her story got pushed to the back burner.
Yeah, tell me about the other times.
The times where it felt like it got pushed to the back burner.
Yeah, so I mean, I spoke with the feds at one point
when I was working in Manchester, not with Eric.
They actually came to me and asked me to talk to them. So I'm like,
okay. So I went to their building and they at first asked me all kinds of questions about
people. Like they knew everything. And I'm like, wait, what is this actually about? You
know? And she's like, well, you can, you can just tell me everything. So I did. Now, this was fascinating to me on so many levels.
Employee A says she told an FBI agent
about what happened in Eric's office,
the Snapchat's everything.
I was able to corroborate this
with a friend employee A told about this meeting.
And the FBI agent employee says,
didn't seem surprised by her story. The
agent told employee A, you're not the first person to share something like that with us.
But employee A says, the agent seemed more interested in financial stuff. Things employee
A says she really didn't have details about.
And then she said, all right, we'll be in contact with you and blah, blah, blah.
She'd called me once more and then I'd just
stopped hearing from them.
And I called her back and I was like, so is anything else
going to happen or anything like that?
And she's like, oh, you won't be hearing from us again.
I'm like, OK, well, that's cool that I just opened up to you
and you're not doing anything about it. She's like, well, the other step that I just opened up to you and you're not doing anything about it.
She's like, well, the other stuff that you say is more of a police matter.
Like, right, but that's the problem, right?
It's like, you are the police and you're pushing me aside.
So I asked the FBI about this.
Employee A says this meeting took place in 2019 in Bedford, New Hampshire.
But the FBI press office told
me they can't confirm or deny that there was any investigation into granted recovery
centers or Eric. And that last thing employee A says, you are the police. I thought so
much about that. The FBI wouldn't likely have jurisdiction over what happened between employee A and Eric. But still, this
stuck with employee A. She told someone official and powerful and nothing happened. She still
came forward one other time, about a year later. I had heard about this one before.
So another situation I think you told me about one of the times that I got pushed the
back burner was there was an attempt
for a class action lawsuit, is that right?
Do you know what details can you share about that?
There was another girl who basically came to me
and said I need some strong women to come forward with me.
And I was like, okay, why not?
Like I've never, like it's not even necessarily
about the class action lawsuit.
I don't care about the money, I don't care about any of that.
I'm doing this for you for free.
I'm telling you my story for free.
I don't care about any of that stuff.
But she was like, yeah, my lawyers are set up to do whatever they need to do.
I was like, okay.
And she's like,
my lawyer will call you and then never heard anything ever from her lawyers.
And I'm like, okay, and I kept talking to her about it and then come to find out that,
through the grapevine that Eric ended up just paying her off and kind of letting it go.
Employee A is talking about employee B. You might remember this story from episode two. Employee
B accused Eric of sexual assault. She told multiple people at Grand Orchardry Centers about it.
And after that, Eric told the HR director that he had signed a paid settlement with Employee B.
This was part of why a bunch of people quit GRC in the spring of 2020.
So their employee A was. She'd told the FBI. She'd almost joined a class action lawsuit.
And then finally, she told me. As we now know, there were consequences for coming forward to me. This was a part of
employee A's experience that I was especially curious to hear about. We'd only talked a little
in the past year, so I wanted to know what it was like for her to face the legal retaliation from
Eric, starting a day after my original story was published. The day the litigation hold letter started flying.
So the first letter I got, like,
I don't know how to read any of that stuff.
Like, it's all legal mumbo jumbo
that I have no idea how to read it.
So the first thing I just wanted somebody to tell me
what I said before I freaked out about it.
But also it had stuff to do with like Florida court and all this other stuff that he was trying
to sneak in there.
And most of the people were like, what the heck?
This is literally just to scare you.
That's all it is.
You knew that right away.
Yeah.
And at that point, I was just done with letting him scare me, you know,
like he doesn't scare me. Now, you know, he doesn't intimidate me or anything like that. So,
I mean, I got a couple other letters also after that and it was just like one after another of
and I just sent him off to a lawyer that was nice enough to just kind of oversee
everything for me. And he just kept saying, like, listen, this is literally just to scare
you. I mean, do what the letter says, save everything for now, but like, he's just trying
to spook you into thinking that something bad's going to happen. He's like, but I will not let anything bad happen.
I'm like, okay, cool.
That must have felt good.
Yeah, yeah.
The letter that you got that stuck with me the most
was the one where they demanded that you give them
your home address.
Yeah.
So that they, and if you didn't,
they would serve you at work.
Right.
Remember that?
What did that feel like to read?
Well, one, I knew I wasn't going to give them
my home address, because I think that letter came right
after whatever happened to you happened.
She's talking about the vandalism at my house.
So I'm like, okay, well, that's just not going to happen.
And so I went to a supervisor at work and I was like, just so you know, she already knew
about the story.
So I was like, so you know, this is what's happening, blah, blah.
Everyone was like, yeah, let them come here.
I don't care.
Let them do it.
I'm like, okay, cool.
Just as long as we're all out there in the open, we're good.
That one also had, they had like an email,
they wanted you to copy paste to me.
Do you remember this?
Whereas like they wrote your name,
and it was like, my name is, and I'm employee A,
and it was basically like a copy paste for you
to send to me to say everything I said wasn't true.
Correct, yeah.
I mean, that was wild for me to see, I could say.
It was just like the boldness of it.
I don't know if anything in that.
I think the most interesting part of all of those letters is every single one of them
came to my work email.
I think he purposely, he knows how to like scare people and make people nervous.
So I think him even just sending that stuff to my work
email, not my personal email, which has been the same personal email since I worked for
him, was probably the most interesting part of everything. It's like, you know that I'm
sitting here at work and that pops up. You know, I would just go, I would see the email pop up and then I would go into a finance office so
that I could just read it. And then my supervisor would come in and we chat about it and then I go
back to work. No, it's good. It sounds like you have a really supportive friend and work network.
Yeah. Yeah. As your sister has been helpful too. Oh yeah, she's great.
That's good.
I try not to like bombard her with all of this
because like, I mean, she hears she's heard about it
in the past, you know?
But I mean, every time that something would pop up,
she would send it to me and she'd be like,
it's okay, everything's fine.
I'm like, okay. That must help. Yeah, it does.
So we've talked a lot about the letters. One thing I wanted to ask you about was when you heard about what happened at my house? That actually like probably out of everything that happened, that probably scared me the most because I lived by myself.
And I was just like, wow, like he knows where where I lived, you know, um, because I lived there when I worked and therefore worked for him.
Um, so I was there was quite a bit of like paranoia almost to begin with when
that happened. So we still don't know who did it. So I just wanted to say that, that we're still
waiting to see if there are any arrests or anything like that. But what was it about it that made you
scared? And I'm sorry. No, you don't have to be sorry. I know. That was one of my first thoughts was that what was that going to be like for you all to
learn?
It was hard to text you and be like, so guess what?
And realistically, who knows?
Maybe it is completely random.
It doesn't seem like that.
However, I just kept having to say to myself,
like, okay, maybe, maybe it's something else. Maybe, maybe he has nothing to do with it, you know?
Because it made you feel safer. Correct. Yeah. But at the same time, I was like, I know who
Eric's connected with and all of that stuff, like not so great people. And it, I was like, well, I don't live in the safest area anyway, right?
So it would have been very easy for me to be a target living by myself with nobody else, you know? But the longer it happened, the less of that scariness happened, too.
It's like, okay, they're actually just cars driving on the road and I'm okay.
I'm fine.
To be clear, Eric has said he was, quote, completely uninvolved in the vandalism and that
he doesn't condone it.
But he also said that perhaps someone, quote, felt compelled to do these
acts in a misguided attempt to defend me.
Was there ever a moment where you were granted coming forward? No. No. I mean, I've
come forward so many times before that this just felt like something that had to happen. Eventually, me telling this would go somewhere.
So no, I didn't regret it.
I'm like done being nervous about all of this.
Like, I'm done having him make me nervous.
So it's just like, he just likes to gaslight people.
And it works.
And I'm just done letting it work pretty much.
For all the women who didn't come forward or even in other situations where they've been
sexually assaulted or harassed and it wasn't their boss or there wasn't their sponsor.
Um, would you have any advice of someone who's like on the fence about coming forward or
not given how much you've faced after coming forward?
Um, I think coming forward would be the best possible thing.
And, and I think me being persistent and coming forward is probably the best thing to is unfortunately not everyone's
going to believe you and not everyone's going to listen but the more people you tell the more likely
it is to come out especially if you find if one person who's like passionate and finding the truth
so yeah. Is there any like definition of justice for you in the situation?
Just the fact that it's out there, I think, is justice in itself.
The more people who know about it is better. 1 tbh 1 tbh 1 tbh
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1 tbh 1 tbh The 13th step is reported and produced by me, Lauren Chuljian.
And this is our last episode, unless something else happens that you should know about, but
for now, I want to thank you for listening, for coming along on this wild journey with
us.
Reporting this story has been an experience like no other, and I've been so fortunate to be part of an incredibly strong
and thoughtful team.
Jason Moon contributed reporting.
He wrote the music you hear in this show,
and he mixed all the episodes.
Allison McAddom is our editor,
additional editing from Senior Editor Katie Culinary,
and news director Dan Barich.
Fact checking by Daniel Suleiman, Sarah Plore created our artwork and our website 13StepPodcast.org
that's the number 13.
Sigmund Schutz is our lawyer and we also had support from some of his brilliant colleagues,
Jonathan Merman, Simon Brown and Paul Greenberg.
NHPR's director of podcast is Rebecca LaVoy
and special thanks to Casey McDermott, Taylor Quimby,
Ariana Lake, Max Green, Ilya Maritz, Jim Shactor,
William Chapman, Patrick Smith, Tony Arnold,
Barbara Van Worcum, Bruce Shapiro, Kate Howard, Laura Ellis,
and Carrie Johnson.
And also, there have been some incredible journalists
who are so generous with their time and their insights about reporting on sexual misconduct.
So a special shout out to Sasha Fyfer, Amy Britton, Rebecca Corbett, and Trisha Nidolny.
And a huge thank you, of course, to my family.
This reporting was supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalists.
The 13th step is a production of the Document Team at New Hampshire Public Radio.
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