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Feds arrest New Hampshire CEO for allegedly devising conspiracy to stalk, intimidate journalists

The former CEO of Granite Recovery Centers, a network of drug and alcohol treatment centers in New Hampshire, was arrested Friday for allegedly orchestrating a conspiracy to stalk journalists, the Department of Justice in a statement. 

Eric Spofford, 40, was accused of targeting journalists employed by New Hampshire Public Radio (NHPR) in retaliation for publishing  that allegedly revealed multiple allegations of sexual misconduct against him while he was the CEO of the recovery centers. Spofford opened the Granite Recovery Centers after struggling with heroin addiction and turned the business into the largest addiction treatment network in New Hampshire.

The NHPR article made a splash, grabbing the attention of local and national media, officials said. Spofford publicly denied the allegations and later  for defamation. He claimed the public radio station  a "hit piece" against him. He said in his complaint that as a result of the investigation, financial institutions declined to do business with him, vendors abruptly resigned from working with his companies, and he was distanced from working with New Hampshire politicians. 

He said in court documents that he didn't feel comfortable in his home state after the investigation was published. 

A New Hampshire Spofford's lawsuit in 2023.

The Department of Justice said Spofford devised a plan beginning in or about March 2022 and continuing through at least May 2022, to harass and terrorize the journalist who authored the article, the journalist's immediate family members, as well as a senior editor in response and retaliation for the station's reporting. 

He allegedly hired his close friend Eric Labarge to vandalize and spray paint the victims' homes with large rocks and bricks, lewd and threatening language.

"JUST THE BEGINNING" was spray-painted on the reporter's home, to WBUR radio station. 

Spofford allegedly paid Labarge $20,000 in cash, gave him the victims' addresses and directions on how to harass them. Labarge, in turn, hired Tucker Cockerline, Keenan Saniatan and Michael Waselchuck to carry out the stalking campaign.

Labarge, Cockerline, Saniatan and Waselchuck were charged, convicted and sentenced to prison for their involvement in the harassment campaign.

Spofford said Granite Recovery Centers for nine figures in 2021. CBS News reached out to Spofford for comment on his arrest.

He is scheduled to appear in federal court in Boston on Monday.  

New Hampshire Public Radio President and CEO Jim Schachter said everyone on their team was grateful to the U.S. Attorney's Office and the FBI for pursuing the case against Spofford and his associates. 

"Attacks on journalists have no place in American life," Schachter said to CBS News in a statement. "His attempt to silence NHPR's reporting on abuses of power in the addiction recovery industry failed, as should every attempt to snuff out press freedom."

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