Feds Unlock 1,623 Pages of Chilling Civil Rights Cold Case Files
Published Date: 3/18/2026
Notice
Summary
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.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
1,623 Pages Released to the Public
The Review Board decided to publicly disclose a total of 1,623 pages from two civil rights cold case incidents: 821 pages in full and 34 pages in part for incident 2024-003-050 (decision Feb 27, 2026), and 767 pages in full and 1 page in part for incident 2024-004-011 (decision Mar 6, 2026). Those pages were added to the Civil Rights Cold Case Records Collection and the Board published its notice on March 18, 2026.
Some Grand Jury Material Remains Sealed
For incident 2024-003-050, NARA proposed 259 postponements of sealed federal grand jury information and the Review Board listed those postponement identifiers (2025-NARA-03-0088 through 2025-NARA-03-0348) as postponed; the Board decided not to ask the Attorney General to petition a court to unseal that information at this time but may revisit the decision later.
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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.
2026-03210 — 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.
2026-02624 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release 1,051 pages of important records about five civil rights cold cases. These records will be made public soon, with no delays or extra costs. This move helps everyone learn more about these historic cases and follows the law that says the Board must share their decisions quickly.
2025-22159 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release 22 pages of important records about a civil rights cold case. These records will now be public, following a law that makes sure such decisions are shared quickly. This update affects anyone interested in civil rights history and transparency, with no costs or delays involved.
2025-21342 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
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2025-21344 — Notice of Formal Determination on Records Release
The Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board decided to release 63 full pages and 43 partial pages of records about a civil rights cold case, despite the Department of Justice wanting to delay. This means more information will be available to the public soon, with no extra costs or delays expected. The decision was made official on October 10, 2025, and announced within the required two weeks.
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