**FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE**
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Baffling Data Anomaly Emerges from San Diego Shooting Tragedy: ‘Ghost Signature’ Matches Victim’s Own Digital Footprint
SAN DIEGO, CA – A chilling new layer of data has emerged from the investigation into the recent mass shooting at a downtown San Diego public plaza. While authorities focus on the human perpetrator, a team of independent data forensics analysts is sounding the alarm on what they call a “perfect resonance anomaly” embedded in the incident’s digital timeline.
Initial reports suggested the shooter, identified as 32-year-old Marcus Thorne, acted randomly before taking his own life. But a deep-dive into the geolocation metadata, traffic camera feeds, and social media uploads from the twelve-minute window of the attack has revealed a statistically impossible pattern.
The glitch? Every single piece of digital evidence—from the first 911 call to the final gunshot sound wave—contains a faint, repeating “ghost signature” that matches the unique digital ID of the vehicle the shooter used for his getaway… which, until the shooting, was being driven by his estranged wife, claiming to be 200 miles away in Los Angeles.
Here’s where it gets weirder: The timestamp on that ghost signature doesn’t align with the attack. It’s post-dated. The signature appears with a timestamp exactly 4 hours and 37 minutes after the shooting, synchronized to a digital clock that was never manufactured.
The analysts have dubbed it a “causality loop.” It suggests that the vehicle’s digital footprint was not only present before the attack (as Thorne drove it), but the same, identical signal was also projected back into the event from a point in the future.
“This isn’t a glitch in the code. It’s a glitch in the fabric of the event itself,” says Dr. Aris Thorne (un