
Hackers Nab Data on 10 Jones Day Clients in Phishing Attack
Hackers infiltrated Washington, D.C.-based Jones Day and stole data on 10 of its clients via a phishing-related cyberattack.

Hackers Nab Data on 10 Jones Day Clients in Phishing Attack
Hackers infiltrated Washington, D.C.-based Jones Day and stole data on 10 of its clients via a phishing-related cyberattack.

Internet-Crime Losses Grew by 26 Percent in 2025, FBI Says
Americans reported more than 1-million internet-crime complaints to the FBI in 2025, with disclosed losses rising to a record $20.877 billion, up 26 percent from the prior year, according to the bureau’s annual IC3 report published Monday.

After OFAC Waiver, Asian Nations Increasingly Turn to Russian Oil
Asian countries hit by acute energy disruptions from the Gulf conflict are increasingly turning to Russia for emergency oil supplies after the United States granted a temporary sanctions waiver on Russian crude.

CFTC Sues 3 U.S. States in Fight over Prediction Markets Oversight
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued Arizona, Illinois, and Connecticut on Thursday, escalating the Trump administration’s defense of prediction markets and arguing that the federal agency has exclusive authority over contracts offered by platforms such as Kalshi.

Misinvoicing in Asian Trade Has Doubled Over the Past Decade: Report
Trade misinvoicing is occurring at “massive scale” across Asian supply chains, with discrepancies in reported invoice values reaching a record $1.7 trillion in 2022 across developing Asia.

Cambodia’s Parliament Passes First-Ever Law Aimed at Online Scam Centers
Cambodia’s parliament on Friday passed the country’s first law specifically aimed at combating online scam centers, setting prison terms and fines for fraud, money laundering, data theft, and recruitment tied to the illicit industry as scrutiny intensifies over the country’s role in global cyber scams.

How the ‘Panama Papers’ Changed (and Didn’t Change) Offshore Secrecy
Ten years after the Panama Papers exposed the offshore financial system exploited by tax cheats and criminals around the world, prosecutions and transparency reforms tied to the landmark investigation are still unfolding.

BofA Gets Preliminary Yes for Epstein Deal as Lithuania Expands Probe
A U.S. judge on Thursday granted preliminary approval to Bank of America’s $72.5 million settlement with women who accused the bank of facilitating Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse.

Transparency Advocates See Flaws in BVI’s New Registry Rules
The British Virgin Islands has opened part of its long-guarded corporate registry to outside scrutiny, but anti-corruption advocates say the new transparency rules contain loopholes that could let bad actors hide ownership information and undermine investigations.

Rwanda Threatens to End Islamic State Fight Over U.S. Sanctions Row
Rwanda has threatened to withdraw its troops from northern Mozambique, where they have spent the past five years containing Islamic State-linked militants, after the U.S. imposed sanctions on Kigali over its alleged support for the M23 insurgency in neighboring Congo.