Award-winning journalist Joel Grover has been an investigative reporter for NBC4 since 2003. He is nationally known for his undercover investigations, which often expose consumer fraud and government wrongdoing – see his stories here. In addition, Grover is focused on reporting on L.A.’s homelessness crisis with the station's ongoing “Streets of Shame” series.
Grover has won nearly every major award for investigative reporting, including the Peabody, the DuPont-Columbia, at least 20 local area Emmy Awards, six National Edward R. Murrow Awards, two IRE (Investigative Reports and Editors) Medals, and three Society of Professional Journalists Medals.
His investigations have resulted in millions of dollars in refunds to consumers, changed laws, and sent people to prison. His exposé of the Los Angeles County Health Department's restaurant inspection program prompted creation of an A-B-C grading system for L.A. County eateries. His reports on Jiffy Lube, the nation's largest car repair chain, resulted in nationwide changes in the company's practices and policies. His investigation of Southern California car dealerships resulted in prison sentences for six top managers and a settlement returning $1.5 million dollars to customers.
After graduating with honors from the University of California at Berkeley, Grover began his broadcasting career in Grand Junction, Colorado. Before coming to NBC4, he was an investigative reporter for KSTP in Minneapolis and KCBS in Los Angeles.
The Latest
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‘A cry for help.' Homeless man dances on car and smashes windshield, then spends a night in jail
The man with a lengthy criminal history was charged with felony vandalism but let out of jail the next day.
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Inside job? Thieves target elderly in senior living homes, take off with thousands of dollars of jewels
Surveillance video shows a masked man with a backpack broke into a Westwood senior living apartment and stole jewels and designer handbags.
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NBC4 I-Team finds graves apparently vanished at nation's largest cemetery
Viewers who contacted the I-Team couldn’t find their relatives’ graves, so the I-Team investigated and found out why they vanished.
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This LA neighborhood remains free of homeless tents. The I-Team reveals why
For years, one residential section of Hollywood had been plagued by homeless encampments that brought trash, drugs and fires to the area. But now the area remains tent-free.
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When Los Angeles hosts 2028 Olympics, visitors may be greeted by tens of thousands of homeless people
There could be around 30,000 homeless people on the streets by the time Los Angeles hosts the 2028 Olympics.
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Neighbors near Hollywood sign say 2028 Olympic tourists could cause massive fire
People who live near the Hollywood sign say the city of Los Angeles must find ways to control rowdy tourists before the LA Olympics in 2028.
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Illegal fireworks could land on your roof, set your house on fire as 4th of July approaches
Nearly every weekend lately, groups of young people shoot off dozens of illegal fireworks on a quiet street next to Los Angeles’ Harbor Gateway neighborhood, and one of the mortars landed on the roof of a house on the corner of Denver Avenue and 158th Street.
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Left in the dark: 25,000 streetlights are out in LA, putting safety at risk in some neighborhoods
A record number of streetlights are out in Los Angeles. Why are so many LA neighborhoods being left in the dark?
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Up in flames: Rising number of homeless fires threatens LA neighborhoods
Some fires at Los Angeles homeless encampment are apparently started when the homeless tap into city electrical wires to bring power to their tents.
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The big shuffle: Some homeless people in LA being shuffled from block to block
The block of El Centro Avenue at the Hollywood Walk of Fame remains free of tents, nine months after LA’s Inside Safe program dismantled an encampment there and offered motel rooms to the unhoused.