Former President Biden sued the Justice Department in late May 2026 to block disclosure of roughly 70 hours of 2017 audio recordings and transcripts from interviews with ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer, materials gathered during Special Counsel Robert Hur’s classified-documents probe. The recordings became subject to a Freedom of Information Act request from the Heritage Foundation and a congressional demand, prompting the DOJ to schedule partial release by mid-June absent court intervention. Biden’s filing argues the conversations are private and protected, while the department has indicated it will withhold disclosure pending judicial review of the motion to intervene. The federal district court in Washington is now weighing the competing claims, with any ruling on an injunction or stay directly determining whether release occurs on the current timeline.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedJune 30
14%
$882 Vol.
June 30
14%
Released to the public refers to the DOJ making the audio recordings freely accessible to the general public for listening, downloading, or other forms of public accessibility. A qualifying release must be intentional by the DOJ; leaks or hacks will not qualify. Paywalls or similar restrictions will not disqualify a public release.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the Department of Justice; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: May 12, 2026, 1:21 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Released to the public refers to the DOJ making the audio recordings freely accessible to the general public for listening, downloading, or other forms of public accessibility. A qualifying release must be intentional by the DOJ; leaks or hacks will not qualify. Paywalls or similar restrictions will not disqualify a public release.
The primary resolution source will be official information from the Department of Justice; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Former President Biden sued the Justice Department in late May 2026 to block disclosure of roughly 70 hours of 2017 audio recordings and transcripts from interviews with ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer, materials gathered during Special Counsel Robert Hur’s classified-documents probe. The recordings became subject to a Freedom of Information Act request from the Heritage Foundation and a congressional demand, prompting the DOJ to schedule partial release by mid-June absent court intervention. Biden’s filing argues the conversations are private and protected, while the department has indicated it will withhold disclosure pending judicial review of the motion to intervene. The federal district court in Washington is now weighing the competing claims, with any ruling on an injunction or stay directly determining whether release occurs on the current timeline.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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