Andy Davies is a Home Affairs Correspondent for Channel 4 News covering Wales & the West of England.
In 2019 he was named TV Journalist of the Year by the Royal Television Society. This followed his reporting on the programme’s award-winning Cambridge Analytica investigation and ‘Out in the Cold’ homelessness series. His feature ‘Her Name was Lindy’ about a 32 year old rough sleeper who died in Cardiff was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Exposing Britain’s Social Evils.
Operating out of our Cardiff bureau, he has reported on some of the most high profile criminal cases in recent years (April Jones; Ian Watkins; Jo Yeates; Becky Watts) and previously broke several exclusives on the phone hacking scandal. He is the only journalist to have interviewed ex-police officer Bob Lambert about his hugely controversial double life in which he fathered a child while working undercover.
Before joining Channel 4 News, he was a reporter for BBC Panorama and BBC Northern Ireland.
Paranoid psychotic Matthew Tvrdon admits killing a mother and targeting five other family groups in 30 minutes of terror in Cardiff last October. Home Affairs Correspondent Andy Davies reports.
The case against Mark Leonard Bridger, found guilty of abducting and murdering April Jones, has been “compelling”, in the words of the prosecution.
The Daniel Morgan murder case is “as grave a case for the Metropolitan Police as was the murder of Stephen Lawrence”, the former lead detective in recent investigations tells Channel 4 News.
Around 20 per cent of Southampton’s residents were born abroad – making it a perfect place to gauge the pros and cons of being an immigration nation.
The political sabre-rattling, rarely subdued, has been particularly shrill of late. Andy Davies introduces our series on how Britain is responding to the challenge of immigration.
Schoolgirl Beth Reeks was fed up of trying to find a teenage novel that didn’t include vampires or werewolves, so she wrote one. One of the UK’s biggest publishers releases her first book on Monday.
Doctors are urging parents to make sure their children get the MMR vaccine, after more than 100 new cases of measles are reported in the Swansea area in the past week.
Blindness, bereavement and post-traumatic stress disorder. Andy Davies meets three people whose lives have been forever changed by the decision to go to war in Iraq a decade ago.
As Ed Miliband speaks out on immigration, our Home Affairs Correspondent Andy Davies visits a town in Wales where, according to one estimate, Polish people make up 12 per cent of the population.
Thousands of people turn out to celebrate Swansea City’s triumph in the League Cup – the first time a non-English club has won it.
Ieuan Jones, Swansea City’s oldest travelling fan, tells Channel 4 News what the club’s first major silverware means to him in 80 years of supporting the football club.
The IPCC investigates allegations of gross misconduct involving three British Transport Police officers in relation to statements given after a man fell to his death from a multi-storey car park.
Detective Chief Inspector April Casburn committed a “gross breach” of public trust by trying to sell information about a phone hacking investigation to the News of the World, a court heard today.
A report into failings at Stafford Hospital is expected to recommend new NHS regulation, training and attempts to weed out bad managers. Home Affairs Correspondent Andy Davies reports.
The National Union of Journalists has adopted Ireland’s regulatory system as its preferred future model and Lord Leveson himself, according to a recent report, is struck by it.