Cece Woods has built her reputation as a fearless investigative journalist by pursuing the stories that mainstream media often overlooks, or avoids altogether. Her reporting is defined by a relentless commitment to truth, even when it exposes corruption, contradicts official narratives, or challenges powerful institutions. Where others stop at the surface, Woods digs deeper, uncovering testimony, evidence, and records that shift the public’s understanding of critical events.

In 2018, Woods exposed the two-year law enforcement cover-up in the Malibu Creek State Park shootings, breaking the story that forced accountability and finally brought the truth to light. Later that year, during the catastrophic Woolsey Fire, she provided the most comprehensive local coverage when mainstream outlets failed to capture the scope of government negligence. Her work reached over one million people across social platforms, cementing her role as a trusted source when it mattered most.

Her investigative reporting has also taken on high-profile cases, including the Rebecca Grossman trial, where Woods challenged the prosecution’s narrative, highlighted suppressed evidence, and revealed inconsistencies ignored by larger outlets. In Los Angeles County, she partnered with watchdog organizations and corruption experts to expose the controversies surrounding Phil Washington, then CEO of L.A. Metro, reporting that contributed to the collapse of his nomination to head the Federal Aviation Administration.

Woods’ work is unapologetically independent. She refuses to bend to political pressure, media bias, or the mob mentality of social media, and as a result, her platforms have become safe havens for whistleblowers, victims’ families, and community members seeking accountability. For Woods, investigative journalism is not just a profession, it is a calling to confront power, reveal what others will not, and ensure the public has access to the truth.