Latest Celeb Articles
Editorial and Corrections Policy
Last updated: July 2026
LatestCelebArticles publishes news, biographies, and background stories about celebrities, athletes, and people who appear in the news. This page explains how we research our articles, the rules our writers follow, and what we do when we get something wrong. We wrote it in plain language so anyone can understand how this site works.
If you have a question about this page or about a specific article, contact us at latestcelebarticles@gmail.com.
Our Basic Rules
Every article on this site follows the same rules:
- Every article shows the name of the author and the date it was published. If an article is changed later in any meaningful way, it also shows the date of the last update.
- We only publish information we can support with a source. When a key fact comes from another publication, an official statement, a court record, or a social media post, we link to that source inside the article.
- We separate facts from claims. When something is confirmed, we state it plainly. When something is reported but not confirmed, we say who reported it and make clear that it has not been confirmed.
- We do not invent details. If we cannot confirm a person’s age, family details, job, or any other personal fact, we either leave it out or clearly mark it as unverified.
- A named person is responsible for every article. Writing and research tools may help us prepare drafts, but a human author researches, checks, and approves every article before it goes live.
How We Source Our Stories
Our articles are based on:
- Reports from established news organizations, which we credit and link to
- Official statements from police, courts, government bodies, sports teams, employers, agents, and publicists
- Public records and court documents
- Social media posts from verified accounts, or from accounts we have strong reason to believe are genuine
- Statements given directly to us
When we use a social media post from an account that is not verified, we look at the account history, photos, connections, and other public signals before treating it as genuine. If we are not confident, we either do not use it or we clearly describe it as unconfirmed.
We do not build stories on anonymous forum posts, rumor accounts, or messages we cannot trace back to a real source.
Crime and Court Reporting
Some of our articles cover people connected to criminal cases. These stories need extra care, so we follow strict rules:
- A person who has been arrested or charged has not been found guilty. We use words such as “accused”, “alleged”, and “charged with” until a court reaches a verdict. We never present an accusation as a proven fact.
- We state where the information about an arrest or charge came from, such as a police statement, a court listing, or a named news report, and we link to it.
- We follow cases through to the end. If charges are dropped, or a person is found not guilty, or a person is convicted, we update the article to reflect the outcome. If you notice an article of ours that was not updated after a case ended, please tell us and we will fix it.
- We do not publish home addresses, phone numbers, vehicle details, or exact workplace locations of suspects, victims, or their relatives.
- We treat victims and their families with respect. We only quote tributes and statements that they made publicly, we say where those statements were posted, and we will remove that material if the family asks us to.
Privacy and Private Individuals
Public figures such as actors, athletes, and musicians accept a level of public attention. Private individuals do not. When a private person appears in the news, we limit our reporting to information that is relevant to the story and already public.
We take particular care with children. We do not name minors in crime stories or other sensitive stories. In profiles of public figures, we only mention details about their children that the parents have already shared publicly themselves.
If you are a private individual featured in one of our articles and you believe the coverage is unfair, inaccurate, or harmful, contact us. We review every request.
Images and Media
We only use images we have the right to display. That includes:
- Licensed photos and stock images
- Official press and publicity images
- Images released by police, courts, or other public bodies
- Embedded posts from Instagram, X, Facebook, and similar platforms, which display the content directly from the original account
We credit image sources. We do not download personal photos from private accounts and re-upload them as our own. If you believe an image on this site infringes your copyright, please see our DMCA page or contact us, and we will act quickly.
Corrections
We work hard to get things right, but mistakes can happen. This is how we handle them:
Factual errors. If we published something that was wrong, we correct the article as soon as we confirm the error. We also add a correction note to the article that explains what was wrong and when it was fixed. We do not quietly delete mistakes.
Clarifications. If something we wrote was accurate but could be misunderstood, we adjust the wording and, where needed, add a note.
Minor fixes. Spelling, grammar, and formatting fixes that do not change the meaning of an article are made without a note.
To request a correction, email latestcelebarticles@gmail.com with:
- The link to the article
- The exact sentence or detail you believe is wrong
- The correct information
- Anything that supports the correction, such as a link or a document
We aim to reply within 48 hours and to resolve valid correction requests within 7 days.
Updates to Published Stories
News stories can develop after publication. When we add new information to a story, we mark it with an update note and the date. Older biography articles are reviewed from time to time so that details such as age, career status, and relationships stay accurate.
Right of Reply
If you are the subject of one of our articles and you believe it is wrong or unfair, contact us. We will listen, review the article against our sources, and correct anything we got wrong. Where appropriate, we can add your statement to the article so readers see your side of the story.
Content Removal Requests
We generally correct and update articles rather than delete them, because removing stories quietly damages reader trust. However, we review removal requests case by case, and we give serious weight to requests where:
- The article is about a private individual and the information causes ongoing harm
- Charges against a person were dropped, or the person was found not guilty
- The article involves a minor
- The information is badly outdated and no longer serves any public interest
Send removal requests to latestcelebarticles@gmail.com with the article link and the reason for your request.
Advertising and Independence
This site is funded by advertising. Advertisers have no influence over what we cover or how we cover it. We do not accept payment to publish, change, or remove editorial content. If we ever publish sponsored content, it will be clearly labeled as sponsored.
Contact
Editorial questions, corrections, and removal requests: latestcelebarticles@gmail.com
Copyright issues: see our DMCA page
