**BREAKING: Biden DOJ Accused of Auditing the Constitution — Secret Audio from Closed Door Meeting Reveals 'Who Benefits' Playbook**
In a leaked audio file that has Washington insiders scrambling, what appears to be a closed-door Department of Justice planning session has surfaced — and the transcript is already going viral for its brazen cynicism.
The audio, purportedly from a strategy meeting regarding the ongoing lawsuit to block the release of President Biden’s recorded interviews with special counsel Robert Hur, contains a voice identified by sources as a senior DOJ official allegedly stating: *"We don't sue to protect the law. We sue to protect the narrative. The question isn't whether the audio is legally releasable — it's who benefits from the doubt when the tapes come out?"*
If authentic, the recording appears to confirm what many skeptical observers have long suspected: that the DOJ's aggressive legal posture in this case is less about executive privilege and more about political damage control. The lawsuit, which seeks to prevent the public from hearing Biden’s unscripted remarks about classified document handling, now looks less like a constitutional defense and more like an admission that the unedited truth could be inconvenient.
Legal commentators are asking: is the DOJ acting as a shield for the man who appointed its leader, or as a neutral arbiter of justice? The leaked audio suggests the latter — and the question “*Who benefits?*” is now echoing across social media, #DOJGate trending within hours.
Neither the White House nor the DOJ has commented on the authenticity of the audio. But if it holds up, this could be the most damaging leak of the Biden era — not for what it says, but for who it admits they’re really serving.