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Reveal

The 13th Step

Reveal

The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

News

4.78K Ratings

🗓️ 3 February 2024

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lauren Chooljian from New Hampshire Public Radio reports on a widespread culture of sexual misconduct in the addiction treatment industry. Across the country, women seeking treatment are being harassed and assaulted by men in positions of power. The problem is so pervasive that it has a name among those in the industry: the 13th Step.

We begin with Chooljian explaining to host Al Letson the case that got her started on this investigation. It involved Eric Spofford, owner of New Hampshire’s largest addiction treatment network. After exposing allegations that Spofford was harassing patients, Chooljian, her sources and staff at New Hampshire Public Radio became the targets of intimidation and, in some cases, vandalism.

Chooljian then chronicles another case, this one in California, that illustrates how difficult it is to bring to justice wealthy, powerful people in the industry. Chris Bathum owned a network of treatment centers in California and Colorado and was routinely sexually assaulting clients and offering them drugs. He was also submitting false billing claims to insurance companies. We meet two women, Rose Stahl and Debbie Herzog, who were separately investigating Bathum. Stahl started as a client at one of Bathum’s centers and later worked for him. She pursued evidence that he was assaulting women at the center, while Herzog was looking into insurance fraud.

Stahl blew the whistle about Bathum’s inappropriate behavior to leadership within the company, but the actions they took did not stop him. At the same time, Herzog was facing hurdles in convincing law enforcement to pay attention to the case she was building about insurance fraud. Then serendipitously, Herzog and Stahl learn of each other’s efforts and team up to try to bring Bathum to justice.

Transcript

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0:00.0

In 2010, the largest oil spill in American history captivated the public's attention.

0:06.0

Authorities told a story of a response effort that prevented a worst-case scenario.

0:11.0

But if you ask some people who lived through the spill, they'll tell you a more complicated story.

0:17.0

They weren't attending to the workers.

0:19.0

I was bleeding from everywhere. We were all lied to. From Western Sound and APM Studios comes a new

0:26.1

investigative podcast, Ripple, available now.

0:30.1

From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX, this is reveal.

0:35.0

I'm Al Letton.

0:37.0

In March 2022, New Hampshire Public Radio broke a big story.

0:43.0

It was about the founder and then CEO of New Hampshire's largest addiction treatment network.

0:48.0

I'm about as well known as a drug addict.

0:51.0

What a weird claim to fame. I'm a very well-known drug addict in this state.

0:55.4

Eric Spofford built his business on his own story of substance use disorder and recovery.

1:01.6

New Hampshire was hit hard by the opioid epidemic,

1:04.0

and he'd become an influential figure in the state's response to the crisis.

1:09.0

Governor Chris Sununu considered Spofford one of his go-to guys and Spofford testified before Congress.

1:16.9

But then, reporter Lauren Chulgin had uncovered that Spofford was accused of multiple acts of sexual misconduct by employees and former clients.

1:27.0

All these allegations raise serious questions about Spofford's leadership, the company that made him wealthy, and New Hampshire's reliance on

1:34.8

Spofford to help address the addiction crisis.

1:37.7

For her story, Lauren spoke to victims at one of Spofford's facilities called Green Mountain Treatment Center,

1:44.0

including a woman named Elizabeth.

1:47.0

The day after she left Green Mountain,

...

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