This week’s headlines are ablaze with news of the Pandora Papers, the biggest ever leak of offshore financial secrets that detail hidden assets of the world’s richest individuals. While other scandalous data leaks have happened before,
Pandora papers have reportedly revealed that King Abdullah II has spent decades gathering an international luxury property empire worth over $100 million, ranging from the clifftops of Malibu, California,
A group of news organisations has released the following main findings after reviewing what it describes as a massive leak of confidential financial records revealing assets held offshore by politicians and public officials worldwide.
Newly released confidential records exposes lucrative tax havens for some of the world’s most rich and powerful figures, from Jordan’s king to spicy pop singer Sharika.
More than a dozen heads of state and government, including the King of Jordan and the Czech prime minister, have hidden millions in offshore tax havens, according to an investigation published on Sunday by the ICIJ media consortium.
The documents notably expose how King Abdullah II created a network of offshore companies and tax havens to amass a $100 million property empire from Malibu, California to Washington and London.
The King of Jordan secretly spent more than £70m ($100m) on a property empire in the UK and US.Leaked financial documents identify a network of secretly-owned firms used by Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein to buy 15 homes since he assumed power in 1999.
I wanted to tell the story of two Ugandans, but decided last minute to tell that of two other Africans. Meet Teodorin Nguema Obiang. In December last year a French court fined him €30 million (USh130 billion) for corruption.
A man on a bicycle rode up to a Los Angeles dealership Wednesday evening and drove off in a celebrity DJ’s custom $350,000 pickup truck, police say. The cyclist threw his bicycle in the back and stole the giant Ford VelociRaptor 6×6 owned by DJ Marshmello from a service bay about 6:30 p.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex say people using drones and helicopters to take photos of their son Archie above their Los Angeles-area home are guilty of "serial intrusions" on their privacy.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex said photographers crossed a line after trying to sell photos of their son Archie in their backyard under false pretenses.
The pair, who have formally stepped down as senior members of the British royal family, first volunteered with Project Angel Food last Sunday, delivering food to homes.