Brooke Baldwin, a 46-year-old broadcast journalist and former CNN anchor, disclosed a deeply personal allegation this week, claiming she was sexually assaulted more than 20 years ago. Baldwin published her account on Monday via her Substack newsletter, detailing an incident she states occurred during a spring break trip to Los Angeles when she was 21 years old. Her disclosure marks a significant moment for the journalist, who has previously hinted at similar experiences without revealing her own story.
According to Baldwin's Substack post, the incident began when she was alone at a bar in Beverly Hills. She recounted that "two much older men appear[ed] beside me" and offered to buy her a drink. What transpired after accepting the drink remains fragmented in her memory, existing "only in flashes." These scattered recollections include a black SUV, followed by a gap in her memory until she regained consciousness. Baldwin stated she woke up "on the cold, hard bathroom tile floor of my Los Angeles hotel room with a man I did not know" at the Chateau Marmont, a well-known West Hollywood hotel.
The following morning, Baldwin described experiencing profound confusion and a physical grogginess she could not comprehend. She wrote, "There was a deep, kind of grogginess the next day that I did not understand." Upon regaining awareness, she checked her body, concluding that "penetration hadn’t happened." However, she immediately cast doubt on this conclusion, adding, "At least that was the story I told myself."
Baldwin explicitly stated her motivation for coming forward now, emphasizing that her intent is not to garner sympathy, create drama, or attract clicks. Instead, she expressed a hope that her words might resonate with other women who grapple with uncertainty about their own past experiences, prompting them to consider, "Wait, was that assault? Did something happen to me, too?"
This recent disclosure follows years during which Baldwin approached the topic publicly without revealing her personal involvement. In 2018, during a CNN broadcast discussing Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations against then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, Baldwin delivered an on-air monologue. During that segment, she remarked, “We all have our stories — the spiked drink, waking up on a cold hotel bathroom floor, the uncertainty, the shame.” Baldwin has since acknowledged that she deliberately avoided using the word “I” at that time because she was not prepared to share her own story publicly.
The allegations against Brett Kavanaugh, which surfaced in 2018, involved Christine Blasey Ford claiming he assaulted her during a high school gathering in the early 1980s. Ford alleged Kavanaugh drunkenly pinned her to a bed, groped her, attempted to remove her clothing, and covered her mouth when she tried to scream. Kavanaugh forcefully denied all allegations and was subsequently confirmed to the Supreme Court.
Baldwin's Substack post is not the first instance of her publicly airing grievances following her departure from CNN. In a 2024 essay published in Vanity Fair, she detailed her account of how her tenure at the network concluded. In that piece, Baldwin directed blame towards former network president Jeff Zucker, alleging he refused a 2019 request to remove a specific executive producer from her team. She claimed the situation deteriorated from that point, with Zucker eventually threatening her career before she was let go from CNN in 2021. Baldwin wrote, "Jeff wanted me out. No explanation. Just out." She characterized her years at CNN as a period marked by silence and self-suppression, describing an environment where she felt "muzzled."
Beyond her professional life, Baldwin has undergone significant personal changes. She divorced British television producer James Fletcher in 2023 and has since disclosed entering a new relationship, describing the period following her marriage as a personal "rebirth."
Neither Brooke Baldwin nor Jeff Zucker provided comment in response to inquiries regarding these latest revelations. Baldwin's decision to share her story highlights the ongoing public discourse surrounding sexual assault, memory, and the courage involved in coming forward decades after an alleged incident.