| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before March | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Resolved |
| Before September | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Before 2027 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks when the U.S. Department of Justice will publicly release 'Data Set 13' — a numbered DOJ data production whose timing can affect reporting, legal strategies, and downstream analysis. The question matters because the release timing can change the availability of evidence and the public narrative around the underlying matter.
DOJ sometimes issues numbered data sets as part of discovery, public disclosures, FOIA productions, or court filings; each production can require legal review, interagency clearance, and technical redaction before public posting. Historical releases in similar matters show wide variation in timing depending on court schedules, FOIA litigation, classification review, and resource availability.
Market prices reflect traders’ collective expectations about when the DOJ will make Data Set 13 public, and they adjust as new filings, press statements, FOIA developments, or court orders appear. Use prices as a real-time signal of changing information, not as definitive proof of timing.
Typically the event is defined as the DOJ making Data Set 13 publicly available in a manner specified by the market contract (for example, posting on an official DOJ docket or filing it on the public court record). Check the market’s contract text for the definitive operational definition.
Whether a partial or redacted posting counts depends on the contract definition used by this market; some markets treat any public posting labeled 'Data Set 13' as a release while others require an unredacted or complete version. Refer to the event’s settlement rules.
Monitor court dockets (PACER), DOJ press releases and public statements, FOIA tracking pages and correspondence, filings by involved parties, and reputable news wires for notices of filings or scheduled disclosures.
Court orders can mandate a production date or impose confidentiality constraints; stays or appeals can pause public availability. A directive from the court usually accelerates timing, while successful appeals or stays typically delay or block release.
Past numbered releases often cluster around major filings, hearings, or the resolution of related FOIA or classification reviews; preparations such as redaction and interagency clearances commonly introduce multi-week or multi-month variability. Reviewing dates and contexts of earlier Data Sets in the same series can provide context but does not guarantee similar timing.