Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 16
Amy Griffin Sues Classmate for Defamation Over 2025 Memoir Appropriation Claim
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 16

Amy Griffin Sues Classmate for Defamation Over 2025 Memoir Appropriation Claim

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 16

Summary

  • Amy Griffin filed a defamation suit Monday in U.S. District Court in Nevada, accusing a childhood classmate of falsely claiming Griffin stole her sexual-abuse story for the memoir “The Tell.”
  • The lawsuit says the accusation portrayed Griffin as “a fraud and a thief” after the classmate alleged that parts of the book mirrored her own assault experience at their Texas middle school in the 1980s.
  • Published in March 2025, “The Tell” became an instant best seller and drew added scrutiny because Griffin wrote that she recovered memories of the abuse 30 years later during MDMA-assisted therapy.
  • The dispute surfaced after New York Times reporters contacted the classmate in summer 2025; the newspaper later detailed her allegations in a September 2025 article, setting up the latest legal turn around the memoir.

Insights

When a billionaire's memoir relies on drug-induced memories, can the truth ever be proven in a defamation lawsuit?
Could MDMA therapy, on the verge of FDA approval, create false memories that spark multi-million dollar legal battles?