On April 17, 2018, Forbidden Stories launched The Daphne Project by publishing the first of a series of reports by a consortium of 45 journalists from 18 news outlets to complete Caruana Galizia's investigative work.
[5] Reuters cited European Union parliament member, Ana Gomes, who led an EU mission to Malta in 2016, to "examine the rule of law and progress on preventing money-laundering".
[2] Pulitzer Prize-winning German investigative journalist Bastian Obermayer with the Munich-based newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung (SZ),[8] helped found the Forbidden Stories platform[9][10] and serves as vice president.
[11][Notes 2] Sponsors include the Open Society Foundations (OSF), USAID, Swiss-Romanian Cooperation Programme, International Center for Journalists (ICFJ), and the Sigrid Rausing Trust.
"[12] In the film, which premiered on September 1 in Venice, Streep's character is a Texan widow who inadvertently exposes the directors of Mossack Fonseca as she seeks answers about her late husband's savings.
[12] Soderbergh's inspiration for the dark comedy was Stanley Kubrick's 1964 Dr. Strangelove, a political satire about the Cold War and nuclear arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States.