The Iowa Public Information Board appears unlikely to issue a ruling until next year on an open records case involving the Burlington Police Department and Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation.On Nov. 2, the city of Burlington and the DCI appealed an administrative law judge’s opinion that the law enforcement agencies violated Iowa’s open records law when they failed to make public certain investigative files in the wake of the 2015 fatal shooting of Burlington resident Autumn Steele by a city police officer.Steele was shot and killed outside her home by Officer Jesse Hill, who has said he accidentally shot her while trying to defend himself against the family’s dog.Hill was not charged and remains on the police force.The law enforcement agencies disagreed with the judge’s opinion that they violated the law, and appealed the proposed decision with the open records board.According to board rules, attorneys’ briefs must be submitted within 20 days of the board receiving an appeal.During the board’s last monthly meeting in Des Moines, Holly Corkery, an attorney for the city of Burlington who has worked on the Steele case since it first came before the board in 2015, requested an extension to the Nov.