When Rosa Parks refused to give her seat on a Montgomery bus to a white man in 1955, she was put in handcuffs and arrested. But what happened next? The answer to that question just became more clear thanks to a new discovery: disintegrating court records that detail the legal response to Parks’ arrest.
Court records relating to Parks’ act of defiance and other Civil Rights protests, including those of Martin Luther King, Jr., are finally being made public,according to the Associated Press. While thepolice report relating to Parks’ arrest has long been public, the newly unearthed documents relate to the court proceedings that followed.