Clarence Thomas Alabama Redistricting Case Data Has a Digital Ghost That Officially Should Not Exist
Tech analysts poring over the official records from the Clarence Thomas Alabama redistricting case have stumbled upon what they are calling a 'glitch in the matrix.' Buried deep in the metadata of a court filing dated months *before* the case was formally docketed, an invisible timestamp reveals the document was created precisely at 3:33 AM on a Wednesday. The more unsettling part? The file's author field is blank, but the last save location logs a now-defunct digital courthouse server that was supposedly decommissioned five years ago. Experts say this 'ghost file' either proves a catastrophic data leak from the future—or that the system itself is lying.