Data leaked by a former employee in 2007 reveal HSBC's Swiss arm helped clients dodge millions of dollars in taxes in their home countries.
Two journalists convicted of supporting the Muslim Brotherhood will be retried in a proceeding expected to begin Feb. 12.
Adnan Syed's murder conviction in the death of his ex-girlfriend will be heard by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals.
U.S. soldiers who were actually in harm's way take a dim view of the broadcaster's fabricated tale of danger.
The investigation was reignited after reporter James Risen published details of the top-secret operation in his 2006 book.
The longstanding practice of publishing photos of topless women on the paper's third page was widely reported to have been discontinued.
A number of news outlets had fought the FAA’s prohibition of the media's use of drones.
Al Jazeera journalist Peter Greste was sentenced a year ago on charges including spreading lies to helping a "terrorist organization".
The country with the most journalist murders was Syria, followed by Palestine and Ukraine.
What happens when a government agency lies to a reporter?
Newspapers across the country on Friday focused on U.S. President Barack Obama’s immigration speech.
The site would pay hefty sums for "high quality" long-form journalism, and charge readers $3 per month.
The "Hunger Games" star was a victim of a nude photo leak in August and September, and had called the hack “a sex crime” at the time.
The companies appear to have channeled hundreds of billions of dollars through Luxembourg and saved billions of dollars in taxes.
Newspaper editor Ben Bradlee died Oct. 21 at the age of 93. Here are some of his more memorable moments in the business.
The Post's Chris Cillizza says Ben Bradlee had "true swagger." Journalists and others flooded social media with tributes.
Bradlee rose to prominence overseeing the Pulitzer-winning coverage of the Watergate scandal, which led to Richard Nixon’s resignation in 1974.
A report by the Associated Press revealed that several Nazis expelled from the U.S. continued to receive payments through legal loopholes.
"He’s both got a great eye for journalistic talent and a true love of mentoring reporters," Politico Editor Susan Glasser said.
The New York Times announced on Wednesday a plan to eliminate about 100 newsroom jobs to "control our costs."
In 2002, Brazil filed a complaint in the World Trade Organization against U.S. trade subsidies, stating they were against global trade rules.
The newspaper also promoted four senior editors to the newly created position of deputy executive editor.