Legal reporting deals in facts that carry real consequences β a wrong citation, a misstated deadline, or a garbled holding can mislead someone making a decision that matters. When we get something wrong, we say so, on the record, on the article itself.
Factual errors β a wrong case name, citation, date, court, or a misstatement of what a ruling actually held β are corrected and flagged. Minor copyediting (typos, grammar, formatting) is fixed silently and isn't tracked as a correction.
When an article is corrected, we add a visible correction note directly on that article, along with the date it was corrected. We don't quietly edit and remove the error without a trace β the original mistake and the fix are both part of the record.
Where possible, our reporting links back to the primary source β the actual court order, judgment, circular, or gazette notification β rather than asking you to take our summary on faith. If we can't locate or link a primary source, we say so.
If you spot something wrong in our coverage, tell us. Include the article URL and what you believe is inaccurate, and we'll review it promptly.