**Biden DOJ Lawsuit: Mysterious Audio Anomalies Found in Deleted Interview Tapes**
WASHINGTON, D.C. – In what investigators are calling "the most bizarre digital glitch in DOJ history," a routine lawsuit over deleted audio files from the Biden administration has taken a surreal turn. A technical analyst reviewing the remaining fragments of a secret recording has discovered multiple "unexplained timestamp overlaps" and "audio double exposure" patterns that suggest the tapes may have been overwritten by a second, unknown recording.
The case centers on a lawsuit filed against the Department of Justice for allegedly deleting audio from a classified interview. But the real story is in the data. In one 3.7-second burst of static, the analyst detected what sounds like a voice saying "matrix override" in reverse—followed by a soft, mechanical hum that pulses at exactly 4.96 Hz, a frequency known to induce micro-sleep in humans.
"We found a 'glitch in the matrix,'" said the analyst, speaking on condition of anonymity. "There are time stamps that don't line up with any database on Earth. It's like the recording was tampered with *before it was made*."
Legal experts are baffled. The DOJ claims the audio was "lost due to routine file management," but the analyst’s report shows the deleted files share identical metadata with a classified military frequency. Coincidence? Or a hidden signal?
As the lawsuit heads to court, conspiracy theorists are already calling it "The Ghost Tape Trial." One thing is certain: the matrix is glitching, and the Biden DOJ is at the very center of the anomaly.