The New York Civil Liberties Union on Thursday published a full database of police misconduct reports after a federal appeals court in Manhattan denied a request by police unions to block their release.

The ruling, from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, rejected the unions’ motion to stay a district court’s ruling, which allowed the NYCLU to publish the disciplinary records, which had been held by the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board. The database contains more than 320,000 misconduct complaints involving 81,000 officers dating back to 1985, the NYCLU said.