Like
Bild and other tabloids,
Fakt has been subjected to criticism concerning its style of journalism from media watchdogs. The Polish Journalists Association (
pl:Stowarzyszenie Dziennikarzy Polskich) awarded
Fakt twice with a "Hyena of the Year" award, for "a particular unscrupulousness and neglect of the principles of the journalistic work ethics." In 2004,
Fakt published a photograph showing the nude dead body of a murder victim. In 2005, it published the photo of Stanisław Piguła, the editor-in-chief of at the time, with the caption "This sex offender is at large." The story was about a different man, not Piguła. The Warsaw-Praga District Court ordered Grzegorz Jankowski, the editor-in-chief of
Fakt, to compensate Piguła and to publish apologies in each day's edition of
Fakt,
Gazeta Wyborcza, and for the week following the issuing of the ruling. The court stipulated that the apology should take up at least a quarter of the front page of the newspapers. Piguła donated all of his compensation to the palliative care unit of the Konin Voivodeship Combined Hospital. In 2015,
Fakt published an photo of a dying ten year old girl that had been attacked with an axe outside a bookstore in
Kamienna Góra, and sustained severe wounds to her head. The girl died of her injuries a few hours after the picture was taken. In 2018,
Fakt published an article titled "The father chose politics and the son [chose] a rope" () about the suicide of former Polish Prime Minister
Leszek Miller's son, Leszek Miller Junior. The editor-in-chief of
Fakt, Robert Feluś, apologized. Leszek Miller sued
Fakt and Faluś for "the gross violation" of Miller and his immediate family's personal rights. ==See also==