Investigative journalist Drew Griffin died Saturday following a long fight with cancer, family members said, according to CNN. He was 60.
Griffin had been a correspondent for CNN since May 2004, following 10 years at KCBS-TV. Griffin also worked at KIRO 7 Seattle as an investigative reporter for several years in the early 90s. During his decades long career, his work earned him accolades including Peabody and Emmy awards.
Employees at KRIO 7 who worked with him remember Griffin as “one of the best, as a journalist and human being” and his death is a “total shocker.”
So sorry to hear. Great reporter, good friend to so many of us in Seattle. RIP Drew. Condolences to his family.
— Steve Raible (@RaibleKIRO7) December 19, 2022
“Drew’s death is a devastating loss to CNN and our entire profession,” CNN CEO Chris Licht said in a note to staff, according to the news network. “A highly acclaimed investigative journalist, Drew’s work had incredible impact and embodied the mission of this organization in every way.”
“CNN This Morning” co-anchor Don Lemon got emotional Monday morning as he announced Griffin’s passing.
Sad news: Longtime CNN investigative reporter Drew Griffin has passed away at age 60.
— The Recount (@therecount) December 19, 2022
"I'm sorry," says his friend and colleague Don Lemon, who got very emotional on set while reading the story pic.twitter.com/4EUgi2Ntdc
“It is a very sad morning for the CNN family here because there is no one we’d rather have sitting with us right now than our award-winning senior investigative correspondent, and that is Drew Griffin,” Lemon later said. “We wish he was here because he’s not just a colleague but a very dear friend.”
New overnight— @CNN mourns the loss of investigative reporter Drew Griffin: pic.twitter.com/OYYmKUbGio
— CNN This Morning (@CNNThisMorning) December 19, 2022
Griffin won an Emmy Award in 2017 for his coverage of Trump University, the real estate training program operated by former president Donald Trump’s Trump Organization from 2005 until 2010. He also earned Emmys for reports on congressional spending, how thieves target banks and credit cards, and flaws in Ford vehicles that caused them to catch fire.
In 2015, Griffin won a Peabody Award for leading a CNN investigation into more than a dozen military veterans who had died due to appointment delays at hospitals run by the Department of Veterans Affairs. The subsequent coverage prompted the resignation of then-VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and led Congress to pass legislation allowing veterans to seek care outside the department.
In a note Sunday to CNN’s investigative team, the network’s executive vice president of programming, Michael Bass, remembered Griffin as “fearless and artful at the same time.”
“He knew how to push a story forward to its limits, but also tell it in a way that would make everyone understand,” he said, according to CNN. “How many times has he chased an unwilling interviewee? How many times has he spoken truth to power? How many times has he made a difference on something important?”
Griffin is survived by his wife, Margot; his daughter, Ele Gast; his sons, Louis and Miles Griffin; and two grandchildren, CNN reported.
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