Nuix helps reveal Panama papers secrets

Australian technology company Nuix has revealed its role in assisting the examination of leaked documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, currently causing embarrassment to British Prime Minister David Cameron and other global figures

Nuix supplied document processing and investigation technology that was essential to the Panama Papers investigation conducted by German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).

Süddeutsche Zeitung received an anonymous leak of approximately 11.5 million documents, totaling 2.6 terabytes of data, detailing Mossack Fonseca’s role in assisting clients to set up anonymous offshore companies.

The data included nearly five million emails, three million database files, two million PDFs, one million images, 320,166 text documents and 2,242 other unclassified files.

“Nuix technology was an indispensable part of our work on the Panama Papers investigation, as it has been with Offshore Leaks and many of our other in-depth investigative stories,” said Gerard Ryle, Director of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

Süddeutsche Zeitung and ICIJ used Nuix software to process, index, and analyze the data. Investigators used Nuix’s optical character recognition to make millions of scanned documents text-searchable. They used Nuix’s named entity extraction and other analytical tools to identify and cross-reference the names of Mossack Fonseca clients throughout millions of documents. More than 400 journalists in 80 countries around the world then investigated the data before publishing the first set of results on April 4, 2016.

Nuix donated the software to Süddeutsche Zeitung and ICIJ for the purposes of the investigation. A Nuix consultant also advised the investigators on hardware configurations and workflows. Nuix employees never saw or handled any of the leaked data – that task was undertaken by the journalists involved in the investigation.

“This is a huge trove of data by investigative journalism standards—around 10 times the data volume and five times the number of documents of ICIJ’s Offshore Leaks investigation in 2013,” said Eddie Sheehy, CEO of Nuix.

“At the same time, this is only a medium-sized document set in the worlds of eDiscovery or regulatory investigations—some of our customers handle similar volumes of data every day. Nuix is the only technology in the world that can handle this much data and that many documents with speed and precision.”

More information is availabler at www.nuix.com/panama-papers-how-nuix-helped-uncover-facts