Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Actor |
Birth Day | August 21, 1968 |
Birth Place | Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Age | 55 YEARS OLD |
Birth Sign | Pisces |
Governor | Asa Hutchinson |
Preceded by | Bud Cummins |
Succeeded by | Jane Duke |
President | George W. Bush |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Griffin |
Children | 2 |
Education | Hendrix College (BA) Pembroke College, Oxford Tulane University (JD) |
Allegiance | United States |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1996–present |
Rank | Lieutenant Colonel |
Unit | United States Army Reserve 172nd Infantry Brigade |
Battles/wars | Iraq War |
Awards | Meritorious Service Medal Army Commendation Medal (6) Army Achievement Medal (5) Combat Action Badge |
Net worth: $250,000 (2024)
Tim Griffin, a renowned actor in the United States, is anticipated to have a net worth of approximately $250,000 by 2024. With a successful career spanning several years, Griffin has garnered recognition for his versatile performances across film and television. Known for his ability to portray complex characters with depth and conviction, he has contributed to a variety of acclaimed projects. As his net worth continues to grow, Tim Griffin is undoubtedly cementing his status as a talented and accomplished actor in the entertainment industry.
Biography/Timeline
Griffin worked from September 1995 to January 1997 with Special Prosecutor David Barrett in the investigation of former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Henry Cisneros. For two years after that he was the Senior Investigative Counsel for the House Committee on Government Reform.
In September 1999, he became Deputy Research Director for the Republican National Committee (for George W. Bush's election campaign); while in that position, he was a legal advisor for the "Bush-Cheney 2000 Florida Recount Team" (see Bush v. Gore). From March 2001 through June 2002 he was a special assistant to the Assistant Attorney General Michael Chertoff.
Before a March 2006 revision to the PATRIOT Act, interim U.S. Attorneys had a 120-day term limit, pending confirmation by the Senate of a presidential nominee. The Attorney General makes interim appointments; after the revision, the Attorney General's interim appointees had no term limit, effectively bypassing the Senate confirmation process if the President declined to put forward a nomination. Griffin was among the first group of interim attorneys appointed by the Attorney General without a term limit. Gonzales's decision to bypass confirmation for Griffin particularly angered Arkansas's then Democratic senators, Blanche Lincoln and Mark Pryor, who both stated that Gonzales promised them Griffin would go before the Senate for confirmation. Gonzales's decision not to do so prompted Lincoln and Pryor to join many of their Democratic colleagues to demand Gonzales's resignation or firing.
On May 31, 2007, The Washington Post reported speculation that Griffin was in discussions with the then-nascent presidential campaign of Fred Thompson for a top-level post. Instead, Griffin set up an office in Little Rock for Mercury Public Affairs, a New York City-based firm, part of the Omnicom Group, at which Griffin had worked as general counsel and managing Director. (The Thompson campaign paid Mercury Public Affairs to have Griffin as an advisor.) Then, after a short period with Mercury, he started Griffin Public Affairs and the Griffin Law Firm.
In late May 2008, columnist Robert Novak reported that Griffin had been named as the RNC's Director of research for the presidential campaign of Senator John McCain of Arizona. Griffin was assigned to direct opposition research, "although final arrangements have not been pinned down," Novak said. But Griffin said he was not going back to the Republican National Committee (RNC), and that he had not talked to anyone in the GOP's leadership structure or with the McCain campaign about that role.
In 2009, Griffin signed a pledge sponsored by Americans for Prosperity promising to vote against any Global warming legislation that would raise taxes.
In the general election on November 4, 2014, Griffin defeated in the lieutenant governor's race the Democrat John Burkhalter, the former chairman of both the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission, a post once held by later Republican Governors Winthrop Rockefeller and Frank D. White, and the Arkansas Highway Commission. In the last week of the campaign, news broke that Burkhalter as a young man had worked many temporary jobs, including that of a male stripper in Little Rock using the designation "Metro Express". Burkhalter is since the owner of a piping company, with a wife and two daughters, both involved in competitive dance.