After obtaining records the surviving children come to discover that the Feds had numerous instances of obfuscation, blocked out records, and other suspicious activities. In short time the FBI made arrests in the murder case, but the case had clouds hanging over it. There was a double agent working inside the Klan and it was discovered that this agent was in fact riding in the car as Liuzzo was killed, and his involvement is even in question. Later the four men were acquitted as they were tried by a jury of like-minded white men, and then J. Edgar Hoover struck out on a smear campaign against the woman to discredit her and divert attention away from a controversial placement in the Klan. The documentary also showcases the events surrounding the children in the years following their mother’s death. At one point in the 1980’s when it became revealed that a government agent had been in the car the night of the murder the children filed a wrongful death suit against the Federal Government, which they subsequently lost. These and other events slowly began to separate the children from each other in adulthood. While “Home of the Brave” showcases a very important event in the civil rights epoch the film does have all the feel of a news program on PBS. It plays in a traditional mode of discovery, but the story is still absorbing.