Almost a month has passed since a grand jury decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson, the officer involved in the fatal shooting of unarmed black teen Michael Brown, and the prosecutors office is now releasing new recordings and documents.

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The new recordings include more witness interrogations, the results of the autopsy conducted by a Justice Department examiner, as well as police recordings from the day of the shooting.

According to CNN, the new documents do not present any new evidences to the events that led to the untimely death of 18-year-old Brown.

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On the night of Nov. 24, the St. Louis County prosecutor's office promised to release the documents to the public. Some of the details that have emerged state that number of times Wilson fired his gun, why he wasn't carrying his stun gun and other related matters.

While there are a number of other documents released, it is believed that some documents have been withheld from the public.

Sources at CNN have confirmed that some elements missing from the documents are the FBI interviewers with Dorian Johnson, Brown's friend who was present during the incident.

Due to an ongoing investigation, it was requested that the federal authorities keep some of the records out of the public eye.

According to executive assistant Ed Magee, the FBI asked the county "not to release records that are part of an ongoing federal civil rights probe."

While the Brown case may be at a stand still, protestors around the world are still supporting the teen and demanding to see change within the justice system.