One of the biggest databases of leaked documents has just hit the Inteet, and what lies within is a massive and complicated web of corporate ownership that spans the globe.
The ICIJ spent 15 months analysing leaked documents to make links between different offshore entities.
ICIJ
The Panama Papers contain more than 2.5 million files, analysed by the Inteational Consortium of Investigative Joualists and 112 reporters across 58 countries. Today's data dump is just part of the picture, detailing the relationships between individuals, companies and offshore entities.
Think of it like a searchable corporate registry. But in this case, it's a network made up of hundreds of thousands of individuals and companies, with seemingly endless links criss-crossing from Australia to Zimbabwe.
While there's no evidence that any of the entities have acted illegally, the "John Doe" behind the leak argues the data dump exposes the names behind growing income inequality, saying "it doesn't take much to connect the dots."
But if you're keen to rifle through the Panama Papers (and the ICIJ is welcoming citizen joualism) be prepared to be bombarded.
With countless unnamed entities and more than a million spreadsheet entries, there's a reason why it's taken this long to uncover the "politicians, criminals and the rogue industry that hides their cash."
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