Candice Nguyen is a Peabody Award-winning investigative journalist with NBC Bay Area. Born in Oakland, Calif., investigative reporting is her way of fighting for her community.
When Candice was in the third grade, her father died of an aneurysm. Her family suddenly loss their home. Experiencing housing insecurity and watching her young, overwhelmed mother navigate social services gave – and still gives – Candice the grit to tackle injustices plaguing our communities today.
This year, Candice's investigations into Oakland's failing 911 system earned a prestigious Peabody nomination. The 15-part series won a national Hillman Prize for Broadcast Journalism and a regional Edward R. Murrow Award for Continuing Coverage. Reacting to the coverage that prompted state officials to put Oakland on notice and the city to make a $2.5 million investment into its struggling dispatch center, judges said, "This is a reminder of how important this watchdog work is."
In addition to crime reporting, Candice's investigative expertise expands into public transit, police misconduct and housing issues.
In 2022, Candice received a Peabody Award and national SPJ Sigma Delta Chi Award for leading a 10-month-long investigation revealing why a growing number of single fathers are denied access to emergency services, rental housing, and childcare.
The five-part series No Man’s Land led to police and housing policy reform in multiple Bay Area cities.
Candice joined the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit in February 2020. Her journalism career has come full circle with this news organization. More than a decade ago, she worked at NBC Bay Area as an intern and writer. The reporters and photographers who first helped her land a reporter job all those years ago, she now calls her friends and colleagues. Shortly after working in Salinas, Calif., Candice spent several years reporting in San Diego at XETV and NBC San Diego. Before joining NBC Bay Area, Candice was an investigative reporter for KTVU, which is based in Oakland.
During her free time, Candice loves discovering hole-in-the-wall restaurants and spending time with her husband and dog named Lola. Lola loves pets, cuddles and chicken bits; not necessarily in that order.
E-mail Candice at candice.nguyen@nbcuni.com or connect with her on social media:
- Twitter: @CandiceNguyenTV
- Instagram: @CandiceNguyenTV
- Facebook: Facebook.com/CandiceNguyenTV
The Latest
-
Oakland improves 911 response times by 25%, city leaders say
Oakland city leaders say their police department has improved its 911 answering times by 25% this past November, which is a dramatic improvement compared to one year ago.
-
‘Lives are at stake': Next Gen 911 insiders say CA hired inexperienced companies
After years of missed deadlines and documented safety issues surrounding the rollout of California’s Next Generation 911 system, project insiders are now speaking out, saying they feel compelled to warn the public about “major problems” with the years-long overhaul that has cost Californians nearly a half-billion dollars and counting.
-
CA 911: Too Big to Fail
More than a year of digging by our NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit uncovers early warnings about California’s Next Generation 911 network and emergencies where help was delayed because of connectivity issues
-
New Santa Clara Co. Office of Education official launching misuse of funds investigations
SCCOE’s interim superintendent says he has seen enough evidence to initiate a new internal investigation, involvement by outside auditors and a call to San Jose police reporting what he described as possible illegal activity.
-
Blind people rally against Uber, Lyft in SF claiming discrimination
Blind people and their supporters rallied Tuesday against Uber and Lyft in San Francisco, claiming the ride share apps discriminate against them.
-
Oakland promised $2.5M to fix 911. Answer times remain worst in California. What's going on?
Exactly one year after Oakland leaders announced a $2.5 million investment to save the city’s failing 911 Emergency Call Center, average answer times remain the worst in California by a wide margin.
-
State increases monitoring of Oakland 911 center
Oakland’s 911 emergency call center is facing more oversight from state regulators amid the city’s yearslong failure to bring answering times down to the mandated standard.
-
Antioch Unified School District superintendent terminated amid bullying scandal
After a more than a year-long scandal, school board trustees with Antioch Unified School District unanimously agreed to terminate Superintendent Stephanie Anello’s employment contract with the district without cause Wednesday evening. According to her contract, Anello will be paid up to nine months of her $353,000 annual salary.
-
KNTV single fathers docuseries No Man's Land now part of Oakland African American Museum & Library
The struggles of single fathers in the Bay Area, documented by the Investigative Unit, is now part of Oakland’s documented history.
-
Oakland PD avoids state action after mayor says city won't meet 911 deadline
At 10:45 p.m. Tuesday, July 2, 2024, the Oakland Police Department released a media statement saying the California Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) is now collaborating with OPD after learning the department will not meet the upcoming July 26 deadline to improve its 911 response times.