You know, I don't think I'd know about these if I hadn't read this back on the 6th, but I've been googling "panama papers" every day or two since then. I don't normally follow these big controversies, but I'm really into this, and I'm always finding new stuff. And it's really fun watching some of these stories unfold. For example, the first day I heard about this, the Iceland PM was saying that there was no way he was going to resign. I've also read a couple articles about the "Man with Cane" painting, or whatever it's called. To be brief, the people who bought the painting originally claimed that they didn't own it, it belonged to an offshore corporation that just showed it in their gallery, so they couldn't be expected to return it to its original owner. When it turned out that they owned the offshore corporation, they started saying it didn't matter that they owned it because the original owner couldn't prove it had been stolen from his family by Nazis. Last I heard, the Swiss police or something had seized the painting while awaiting trial.
I think the narrative with Russia is really interesting too. One of the earliest articles about the papers that I read was actually on Russia Today, and it was about how the whole thing is clearly an American CIA plot to make Russia look bad and that nothing in it should be trusted. And more recently, I read that Putin was saying that the information wasn't exactly inaccurate, so he basically admitted that yeah, some of his close associates are moving around a lot of money in secret, but he said that it's not important and it's just American manipulation to weaken Russia and you shouldn't care about it, or something like that.
Here's something I found a few days ago that I actually wanted to share. It doesn't have much new information on specific stories, but it's an interview with Marina Walker Guevara on what it was like to manage all the various journalists that investigated the data.
https://www.propublica.org/podcast/item/Meet-the-Panama-Papers-Editor-Who-Handled-376-Reporters-in-80-Countries