Cold Case Secrets Spill: Board Unlocks Civil Rights Files from the FBI
Published Date: 5/12/2026
Notice
Summary
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board reviewed over 1,100 pages of records about a civil rights cold case and decided to release most of them to the public while postponing some sensitive parts. The FBI dropped many requests to keep info secret, so more records will be available now. This decision was made official on April 10, 2026, with no immediate cost or deadline changes for the public.
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Document
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-03814 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release 1,300 pages of important records about four civil rights cold cases. This means the public can now access these documents, with no delays or extra costs. The decision was made on February 20, 2026, and announced quickly to keep things transparent and timely.
2026-09367 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board reviewed over 7,600 pages of records about two important civil rights cases. They decided to release most of the documents to the public but postponed some sensitive info, including sealed grand jury details. This means more history will be shared soon, with some parts still under wraps while legal steps to unseal them are underway.
2026-07541 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release almost all of the 4,808 pages of records about three important civil rights cases, with only a few parts postponed for now. This means the public can finally see most of these historic documents, but some sensitive info, like sealed grand jury details, will stay hidden for now. The Board might revisit those secret parts later, and this decision was made official in April 2026.
2026-06666 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release most records from several civil rights cold cases but postponed some sensitive grand jury info for now. This affects anyone interested in these historic cases, with public access expanding soon. The Board might revisit the sealed info later, but for now, no extra costs or delays are expected.
2026-05222 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release most pages from two important civil rights cold case files, making 1,623 pages available to the public. Some sensitive information will stay sealed for now, but the Board might revisit that later. These decisions follow a law that requires quick public updates and don’t involve any new costs or deadlines for the public.
2026-03210 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release almost all of the 822 pages of records about two important civil rights cases, with just a tiny bit postponed. This means the public will soon get access to these historic documents, following the law’s rules to share info quickly. No extra costs or delays are expected, and the decision was made official in February 2026.
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-09334 — No Adjustment of Civil Penalties for Inflation
Good news for plan sponsors and employers: the fines for missing important pension notices won’t go up in 2026. The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation is keeping penalty amounts the same as 2025 because there’s no inflation increase this year. So, if you owe a penalty, it’ll max out at $2,739 or $365 depending on the rule—no surprise hikes!
Next: 2026-09337 — N-Cyclohexylbenzothiazole-2-sulfenamide From China; Institution of Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Investigations and Scheduling of Preliminary Phase Investigations
The U.S. is launching investigations to see if cheap imports of a chemical called CBS from China are hurting American businesses. If these imports are found to be unfairly priced or subsidized, extra taxes might be added to protect U.S. companies. The first big decision is due by June 22, 2026, so things are moving fast!