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A courtroom scene with a judge's gavel, confidential documents being shredded, and a crowd reacting in disbelief, symbolizing power abuse, cover-ups, and public revelation.

Scandal

From abuse of power and cover-ups to public shock and the price of exposure

What is a scandal? Delve into cases of power abuse, cover-ups, and public shock, that reveal the dark side of power and breaches of trust.


From abuse of power and cover-ups to public shock and the price of exposure


What is a scandal – why it shakes us in true crime?


In true crime, a scandal refers to an event or series of actions that provoke public shock and widespread outrage. This is typically due to gross violations of the law, ethical norms, or breaches of public trust, often committed by individuals or institutions wielding significant power. The core of a scandal is not merely the criminal act itself, but also largely the subsequent exposure, the systematic attempts at a cover-up to hide the truth, and the profound consequences for both the involved parties and society as a whole. Abuse of power is often a central element in these cases.


Toxic cocktail: Power abuse and cover-ups in true crime


Characteristic of these cases is a deep sense of betrayal: individuals or entities entrusted to uphold the law or serve public interests have instead abused their power for personal gain, to conceal illegal activities, or to commit serious crimes. The scope of a scandal can vary widely, from extensive corruption within the police or political sphere, to complex financial crime in the business world, or systematic abuse in recognized institutions. It is precisely this toxic cocktail of gross abuse of power, often accompanied by an extensive cover-up, and the resulting public outcry that transforms these events into captivating, albeit often unsettling, narratives within the true crime genre.


Fight against concealment: Exposing scandals vs power


The investigation of a scandal is typically a complex and lengthy process. The involved parties, often powerful individuals or organizations, usually possess both the resources and a strong motivation to prevent the truth from being revealed, which often involves sophisticated attempts at a cover-up. Revelations, therefore, rarely occur without an intense struggle and are often the result of the efforts of courageous whistleblowers, persistent investigative journalism, or the unwavering determination of dedicated investigators to shed light on concealed matters. Thus, scandals can also serve as a revealing lens on the mechanisms that actively attempt to suppress justice, as well as highlight the brave individuals who dare to challenge these systems of power abuse and secrecy.


Scandal's lesson: What cases reveal on flaws and justice


Understanding scandals is essential in true crime, as they extend beyond the exposure of individual crimes. They have the potential to uncover deep-seated systemic flaws, the devastating impact of widespread corruption, and the ongoing struggle between abuse of power and efforts to achieve accountability and justice in society. Scandals force us to confront how trust can be broken and how systems designed to protect can instead facilitate the cover-up of serious crimes.


Did this pique your interest? Explore shocking cases of power abuse and extensive cover-ups. Delve into real-life cases of Scandal – find our compelling cases below.

Posts Tagged “Scandal”

49 posts
Faking Hitler: RTL+ zeigt den Hitler-Tagebücher-Skandal von 1983
TV SeriesMay 7, 2026

Hitler's Diary Scandal: Forgery Meets Ambition

A Stuttgart-based artist and an ambitious reporter defrauded the world with 60 forged Hitler diaries for 9.3 million DM. The case is called the greatest postwar fraud.

Hitlers dagbøgerforfalskningStuttgart+3
Brottstycken unveils Sweden's crime history
BookMarch 19, 2026

Sweden's Hidden Court Murders: How a Podcast Revived Cold Cases

A Swedish audio series is drawing international attention to historical Scandinavian crimes, including unexplained deaths within courthouse walls. But questions about victim sensitivity and journalistic methods have tempered its breakthrough success.

PodcastUnsolved caseBank robbery+8
Dirty Billions expose money laundering at Danske Bank
BookDecember 17, 2025

Danske Bank's $230 Billion Money Laundering Scandal

Between 2007 and 2015, Danske Bank's Estonia branch processed approximately €200 billion in suspicious transactions, predominantly from Russian and former Soviet clients. The scheme—revealed publicly in September 2018—ranks among history's largest money laundering operations and triggered criminal charges, multi-billion-dollar penalties, and individual convictions across three continents.

Money launderingEconomic crimeCorruption+17
Gang War: Blood Brothers Reveal Crime's Depths
BookNovember 27, 2025

Denmark's Hidden Gang Wars: A Decade of Nordic Criminal Conflict

A groundbreaking 2012 book by Danish journalists exposed the brutal territorial wars between motorcycle gangs and immigrant crime networks that had ravaged Denmark since 2007. More than a decade later, the documentation remains a critical lens on how Nordic organized crime operates—and why it matters internationally.

Gang crimeViolenceUnsolved case+18
The Danish Underworld
BookNovember 17, 2025

Inside Denmark's Criminal Underworld: Eight Decades of Organized Crime

Two award-winning Danish journalists have documented 80 years of organized crime history in a comprehensive new book, revealing how a small Nordic nation became a hub for international criminal networks. From cigarette smuggling rings to biker gang warfare, the chronicle exposes Denmark's transformation into a strategic outpost for transnational crime.

CorruptionGang crimeDenmark+16
Swedish Crimes: The Boden Case Reveals Judicial Weaknesses
BookOctober 28, 2025

The Boden Case: Sweden's Dark Summer of 2013

In the summer of 2013, a 20-year-old woman named Vatchareeya disappeared near Boden, Sweden. Her dismembered remains were discovered weeks later in a forest, sparking an investigation that would illuminate serious weaknesses in how Swedish authorities handle violent crime cases.

Unsolved caseTrialDna evidence+14
Secrets of the Police reveal PET's blind spots
BookAugust 29, 2025

Inside Denmark's Cold War Terror Case: Police Expose Intelligence Service Role

In 2009, retired Copenhagen police superintendent Jørn Moos published an insider account of Denmark's most controversial criminal investigation, exposing tensions between local police and the country's intelligence service. The book reopened questions about how one of Scandinavia's most significant Cold War cases was handled.

Unsolved caseCorruptionCop killing+19
A pair of worn sandals rests on a cruise ship balcony, the Caribbean Sea visible beyond the railing, symbolizing the mysterious disappearance of Amy Lynn Bradley from the Rhapsody of the Seas in 1998.
CaseJune 6, 2025

The Vanishing of Amy Lynn Bradley

On March 24, 1998, Amy Lynn Bradley vanished from the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Rhapsody of the Seas while en route through the Caribbean. The 23-year-old American has never been found, but recent FBI developments suggest her disappearance may be connected to a major trafficking operation.

VanishedCruiseHuman trafficking+27
A laptop screen displaying the Ashley Madison logo amidst lines of code, symbolizing the 2015 data breach that exposed millions of users and led to global blackmail and personal tragedies
CaseJune 6, 2025

Ashley Madison Breach: 37 Million Exposed in 2015 Hack

In July 2015, hackers calling themselves "The Impact Team" breached Ashley Madison, a website marketed for extramarital affairs, stealing personal data from approximately 37 million users across 40 countries. The incident exposed not only intimate details but also widespread corporate deception that defined the scandal.

Data breachExtortionScandal+32
A figure resembling Alex Mashinsky stands in front of a digital display showing a steep decline in cryptocurrency values, symbolizing the collapse of Celsius Network and the financial turmoil faced by its users.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Celsius Founder Sentenced to 12 Years for Crypto Fraud

Alexander Mashinsky, founder and former CEO of Celsius Network, was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison on December 3, 2024, in New York after pleading guilty to commodities and securities fraud. The sentencing concludes a major prosecution of the crypto lending platform that collapsed in 2022, wiping out billions in customer savings.

Economic crimeBankruptcyCrypto+21
A figure resembling Iqbal Khan stands on a bustling Zurich street, checking his watch with a wary expression, as anonymous figures in the background appear to be following him discreetly.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Swiss Banking Scandal: Credit Suisse's Illegal Surveillance of Departing Executive

Credit Suisse hired private investigators to monitor its former wealth management chief Iqbal Khan after he joined competitor UBS in 2019. The resulting case of corporate surveillance, intimidation and potential coercion was settled in 2021, shedding light on ruthless internal politics in global finance.

SurveillanceScandalCorruption+21
A figure resembling Christopher Wylie, in a casual jacket, stands in an office surrounded by computer screens displaying data visualizations, symbolizing the Facebook-Cambridge Analytica scandal.
CaseJune 6, 2025

How Cambridge Analytica Harvested 87 Million Facebook Users

Between 2013 and 2015, a British political consulting firm called Cambridge Analytica systematically harvested personal data from 87 million Facebook users without consent. When exposed in March 2018, the scandal triggered a global reckoning over tech platform accountability that continues today.

CorruptionConspiracy theoryManipulation+20
A figure resembling John Hinckley Jr. stands outside the Washington Hilton, observing the scene with intense focus, his brow furrowed and hands tucked into his jacket pockets, evoking the tense moments before the assassination attempt on President Reagan
CaseJune 6, 2025

The Shot That Nearly Killed a President

On March 30, 1981, outside the Washington Hilton Hotel, a 25-year-old man fired six shots at President Ronald Reagan. The assassination attempt wounded the president and three others, and set in motion events that would reshape U.S. law and national security policy.

AssassinationPsychopathyShooting+19
A figure resembling Jussie Smollett stands outside a Subway restaurant in Chicago’s Streeterville area, glancing towards the empty street, bundled in a heavy coat.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Actor Jussie Smollett Convicted in Staged Hate Crime Hoax

On January 29, 2019, actor Jussie Smollett reported being attacked in Chicago's Streeterville neighborhood in what he claimed was a hate crime. Two years later, he was convicted of orchestrating the entire incident himself, enlisting accomplices to stage the assault for publicity.

Hate crimesFalse reportHigh-profile case+10
A guarded lorry gate at Maze Prison, surrounded by high security fences and watchtowers, symbolizes the historic 1983 breakout involving 38 IRA prisoners.
CaseJune 6, 2025

The Maze Prison Escape: Europe's Largest Jailbreak

On September 25, 1983, 38 Provisional IRA prisoners executed a coordinated escape from HM Prison Maze in Lisburn, Northern Ireland—the largest prison breakout in British and Irish history and the biggest in Europe since World War II.

EscapeTerrorHostages+19
A laptop screen displaying lines of code and visible API tokens, surrounded by notes and diagrams illustrating a data scraping scheme related to LinkedIn profiles, in a cluttered tech workspace.
CaseJune 6, 2025

700 Million LinkedIn Users' Data Sold on Dark Web Forum

In June 2021, a hacker using the username TomLiner posted personal data from approximately 700 million LinkedIn users—roughly 93% of the platform's membership—for sale on the dark web forum RaidForums. LinkedIn disputed the characterization as a breach, arguing the data came from public profiles and external sources rather than a direct hack of its systems.

Data breachCybercrimeHacking+16
A figure resembling Rebecca Schaeffer poses on a bustling Hollywood street lined with star-studded sidewalks, capturing the essence of her rising fame before the tragedy struck
CaseJune 6, 2025

The Murder That Changed Stalking Laws

On July 18, 1989, actress Rebecca Schaeffer was shot and killed outside her West Hollywood apartment by obsessed fan Robert John Bardo. The 21-year-old's murder sparked a national conversation about stalking and resulted in groundbreaking legal protections that would reshape how law enforcement handles threats.

MurderStalkingHigh-profile case+28
A Starwood-branded server room with tangled Ethernet cables and a laptop displaying a web shell interface, symbolizing the vulnerability exploited in Marriott's data breach affecting 500 million guests
CaseJune 6, 2025

Marriott's Massive Breach: 383 Million Guests Exposed

Marriott International disclosed on November 30, 2018, that hackers had accessed its Starwood guest reservation database for approximately four years, affecting up to 383 million guests. The breach exposed sensitive personal information including names, addresses, passport numbers, and encrypted payment data—making it one of the largest data compromises in history.

Data breachIdentity theftEspionage+21
A figure resembling Martha Stewart walks briskly through a bustling outdoor market, surrounded by vibrant flowers and fresh produce, representing her post-prison comeback and revival in the lifestyle industry.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Martha Stewart: From Federal Prison to Business Empire

Martha Stewart sold ImClone shares one day before the stock price collapsed, triggering a federal investigation that culminated in her 2004 conviction for conspiracy and obstruction of justice. After serving five months in federal prison, the American businesswoman orchestrated one of the most remarkable comebacks in modern business history.

High-profile caseEconomic crimeFraud+21
A compromised Microsoft Exchange server displays a terminal screen filled with cryptic code, cables snaking out as a technician in the background examines the setup, symbolizing the widespread impact of the 2021 Hafnium cyberattack.
CaseJune 6, 2025

Chinese State Hackers Breached Thousands via Microsoft Exchange

A state-sponsored Chinese threat actor known as HAFNIUM launched a sophisticated cyberattack against Microsoft Exchange servers beginning January 6, 2021, remaining undetected for two months before Microsoft's March disclosure revealed the breach had compromised thousands of organizations worldwide.

CybercrimeEspionageData breach+21

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