A special edition of our regular behind-the-scenes look at the biggest news stories in Sweden, with regular panelists plus special guests from Swedish media and politics.
UPDATED: 'Julia Caesar', an anonymous right-wing blogger who has blasted Swedish journalists for writing an "epoch of lies" about the benefits of immigration, is herself a former reporter for Sweden's biggest broadsheet, Dagens Nyheter, according to a Swedish tabloid.
The editor of Swedish tabloid Expressen and two journalists are guilty of gun crimes, a Swedish court ruled on Tuesday, upholding a lower court ruling that their investigative sting into buying black-market weapons in Malmö was illegal.
A young woman from northern Sweden has accused tabloid Expressen of slander after it published her picture next to a headline proclaiming, "This is how young people use their mobile phones to meet up for sex".
The editor-in-chief of Swedish tabloid Expressen and two other journalists with the paper have been convicted of weapons crimes related to a report about how easy it is to buy guns in Malmö in southern Sweden.
With more than half the population inoculated, the swine flu scare is waning in Sweden. But questions remain whether the epidemic was grossly exaggerated.
The Expressen newspaper has sacked its US correspondent following revelations that he had close contact with the former leader of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang in Sweden, Thomas Möller.
Several Swedish and Danish news media outlets said on Monday they had been contacted by Burmese regime officials urging them to withdraw their reporters from the country for their own safety.
Swedish tabloid Expressen and its editor Otto Sjöberg are to continue fighting a lawsuit brought against them by the man first suspected of murdering foreign minister Anna Lindh in 2003. The case has now reached the Supreme Court.
The editor of Swedish tabloid Expressen has been convicted of libel by Stockholm district court for articles his paper wrote about actor Mikael Persbrandt.
A jury has found the editor of Swedish tabloid Expressen guilty of defamation after the paper wrongly wrote that actor Mikael Persbrandt had been admitted to a clinic suffering from acute alcohol poisoning.
The editor of Sweden's second largest tabloid newspaper, Expressen, is facing a court in Stockholm after the paper wrongly reported that actor Mikael Persbrandt had been admitted to a clinic suffering from acute alcohol poisoning.
A Swedish appeals court on Friday said Expressen reporter Niclas Rislund was guilty of twice impersonating a police officer in connection to last year’s kidnapping of electronic store Siba’s chief, Fabian Bengtsson.
Swedish actor Mikael Persbrandt is to demand record compensation from the Expressen newspaper after it falsely stated that he had experienced alcohol poisoning and had checked himself in at a detox clinic.
A reporter from a Swedish tabloid did not pose as a policeman to get information about the case of kidnapped businessman Fabian Bengtsson, a court in Gothenburg has decided.
<span class="smallPrint">GOTHENBURG.</span> The trial of an Expressen journalist who is accused of pretending to be a police officer began in Gothenburg on Monday. He denies the charge.