A Los Angeles Superior Court judge has ordered a temporary seal on medical examiner records tied to the killings of filmmaker Rob Reiner and his wife, photographer Michele Singer Reiner, halting public release of autopsy details and other investigative materials while detectives work the case. The Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner said it received the court order at 10:30 a.m. on Dec. 24, initiated by the Los Angeles Police Department, placing a “security hold” on the two cases.
The medical examiner said the couple’s cause and manner of death had already been posted, then removed after the order took effect. “No other case information or records, including the Medical Examiner report, can be released or posted on the website until further notice,” the department said, adding that information will be made available once the order is lifted. The department directed questions about the timeline and investigation to LAPD.
Law enforcement agencies regularly seek security holds in homicide investigations to control the flow of sensitive details, and the medical examiner’s own guidance says such holds limit what can be released publicly while still allowing basic identifiers after next of kin notification. The department’s case-search site states that cases on security hold will not appear in the database even though posted case information is treated as public record under the California Public Records Act.
In court filings described by the Los Angeles Times, the order signed by Judge Deirdre Hill restricts the public release of “any investigative information, notes, reports or photos” tied to the death investigation. The Times noted security holds can cover toxicology and investigator notes and have appeared in other high-profile death cases.
Police have said the seal aims to protect investigative integrity, not shut down disclosure. In a separate AP report on security holds, an LAPD captain said the step helps investigators receive information “before the media and the public,” and L.A. County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Odey Ukpo said such holds are rare across California counties and run against his office’s preference for transparency while a court order remains in place.
Rob and Michele Reiner were found dead at their Brentwood home on Dec. 14. Their son, Nick Reiner, has been arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree murder; an arraignment is scheduled for Jan. 7, 2026, according to published reports.





















































