Hilda Gutierrez is an investigative journalist with over 13 years of broadcast news experience in top markets; Los Angeles, Chicago, and now the Bay Area. Gutierrez has been recognized with 8 Emmy Awards and an Edward R Murrow. She is currently an investigative reporter with NBC Bay Area's award-winning Investigative Unit. Throughout her career Gutierrez has taken roles in national, international, and local newsrooms as producer, general assignment reporter, correspondent, and news anchor. Most recently Gutierrez served as a news anchor and bilingual investigative reporter for Telemundo Chicago Investiga and NBC 5 Investigates.
Having joined NBC Telemundo in 2017, Gutierrez covered award-winning and data driven investigations on topics like sexual harassment, police misconduct, registered sex offenders living in hotels, and a true crime docu series known as the Massacre of Gage Park. She also reported extensively on the impact of the Covid health crisis on vulnerable communities. Gutierrez covered Pope Francis’ visit to Mexico in 2016 and investigated deputy abuse inside L.A. County Jail that set off a federal investigation and led to the convictions of nearly two dozen sheriff officials in 2011. Gutierrez has also been a guest anchor on Noticias Telemundo’s nightly national news and collaborated as a national correspondent.
Prior to working in Chicago Gutierrez was a news anchor and especial assignment reporter in Los Angeles. Early in her career she was a producer for national newscast 'Cierre de Edicion' with Enrique Gratas and became an international correspondent for the magazine investigative show ‘En la Mira’. Raised in Los Angeles, Gutierrez was recognized as one of the “Most Influential Latinas in L.A.” by Alegria magazine in 2014. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Economics and Spanish Literature from the University of California, Los Angeles-UCLA and a Broadcast Journalism certification from UCLA Extension. In her free time Gutierrez enjoys exploring, hiking, learning about new cultures, and trying new restaurants locally and abroad.
The Latest
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Trump administration defies court order to restore legal aid funding for migrant children
Despite a federal judge’s order to resume funding for legal representation of unaccompanied immigrant children, the Trump administration has failed to comply, according to legal aid groups.
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DOJ memo could threaten pro-bono Attorney of the Day program in SF immigration court
Among the Trump administration’s sweeping changes to the U.S. immigration system are new policies that threaten to limit pro-bono legal services in immigration court.
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Possible prosecution for adult in Antioch accidental shooting
A 3-year-old child died from self-inflicted gunshot wound at an Antioch home Tuesday evening.
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Legal aid groups seek to block cancelled contracts to represent unaccompanied immigrant children
Legal aid groups representing unaccompanied minors are seeking a temporary restraining order halting federal contract cancellations.
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Residents oust San Jose HOA board over ‘ridiculous' fines, privacy concerns
Residents of a large San Jose condo complex are celebrating after successfully ousting an HOA board they say imposed excessive and petty fines.
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Legally blind Oakland senior faces potential homelessness after judge sides with landlord
A legally blind senior in Oakland who suffers from a host of other medical issues faces the possibility of being homeless as soon as next week after a judge sided with his landlord in court.
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More empty office spaces in SF despite year-end rebound, report says
A new report takes a look at San Francisco’s 2025 commercial real estate market and it’s not pretty.
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Wartime law enacted by Trump administration to deport immigrants
The Trump administration continues to use all avenues to expedite its stated goal of the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants.
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New details in deadly Piedmont car crash
There are new details on a deadly crash and a heroic rescue that happened months ago in Piedmont.
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Oakland landlord won't let legally blind senior back in home despite overturned eviction
A legally blind man in Oakland says he could soon be on the street because the affordable apartment community for seniors where he lived refuses to let him back into his home, even after his eviction was overturned by a judge.