Corrections Policy

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.

What counts as a correction

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.

How corrections appear

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.

Sourcing

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.

Reporting an error

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.

Report an error