**FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE**
# VIRAL SENSATION: CHRIS HANSEN’S “TO CATCH A PREDATOR” FILES REVEAL DISTURBING NUMERICAL PATTERN – “THE DECOY COMPLEX”
**ATLANTA, GA** – A team of independent data analysts has uncovered what they are calling a “statistical singularity” in the archives of Chris Hansen’s *To Catch a Predator*. The glitch doesn’t involve the usual suspects, but the *decoy* accounts themselves.
“We ran the metadata on every sting house location, every decoy handle, and every timestamp from the original series,” said Dr. Lena Voss, a cryptographer and algorithm forensics specialist. “The probability of this happening by chance is one in 9.6 billion. It’s a glitch in the matrix.”
**THE PATTERN:**
Analysts discovered that across 14 different stings in 8 different states, the **IP addresses used to log into decoy chat rooms contained a repeating geometric sequence of prime numbers**. Specifically, the last four digits of each decoy’s login IP followed the sequence: **29, 31, 37, 41** — then repeated in reverse.
“It’s as if the software assigned these accounts a *signature*,” Voss claims. “But that’s impossible with random DHCP allocation.”
**THE “HANSEN COMPLEX”:**
The glitch deepens. When plotted on a latitude/longitude map of the sting houses, the chat timestamps — when aligned to the decoy’s keystroke frequency — form the exact shape of the **constellation Cassiopeia** as it appeared on the night Chris Hansen was born.
“We’re calling it the *Decoy Complex*,” Voss said. “It suggests either a subconscious algorithmic bias in the decoy system—or that the ‘