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Former President Joe Biden Sues DOJ to Block Release of Private Memoir Audio Recordings
WASHINGTON — Former President Joe Biden has launched a high-stakes federal lawsuit against the Department of Justice, seeking to block the scheduled disclosure of more than 70 hours of private audio recordings and transcripts documenting raw, unedited conversations with his memoir's biographer.
The legal complaint, filed Tuesday night in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, marks an escalating battle over executive and personal privacy rights between the former president and the current Department of Justice. The agency previously confirmed its intention to hand over the unredacted files on June 15 to both the Republican-led House Judiciary Committee and the conservative Heritage Foundation following a series of public records actions.
A Battle Over Personal Privacy and Family Grief
At the center of the legal dispute are audio tapes recorded during 2016 and 2017 between Biden and ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer as they collaborated on the 2017 memoir, Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship, and Purpose. Biden's legal defense team emphasizes that while heavily redacted text transcripts of these sessions have already been made public, the raw audio contains deeply intimate, personal reflections regarding the tragic illness and death of Biden's son, Beau, and the intense emotional toll that ultimately led him to decline a presidential run in 2016.
In the formal court filing, Biden's attorneys fiercely defended the sanctuary of private domestic life, arguing that the federal government is disregarding long-held privacy standard protections.
> “Every American, including a sitting or former Vice President, has a right to privacy in the personal conversations he has within his own home,” Biden’s legal team wrote. “And when the U.S. Department of Justice obtains that private information through a criminal investigation, the Department bears a particular responsibility to protect it from disclosure.”
The Classified Documents Connection
The files originally came into the federal government's possession during the criminal investigation overseen by Special Counsel Robert Hur, which evaluated whether Biden had mishandled classified materials from his vice presidency. In his final 345-page report, Hur chose not to recommend criminal charges, though he alleged that Biden had casually discussed classified notebook entries with Zwonitzer—a claim Biden has vehemently denied.
During the investigation, the Justice Department repeatedly defended keeping the audio files sealed, arguing to federal judges that public disclosure would constitute a severe and unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. Biden’s legal team notes that the DOJ under the current administration abruptly reversed this stance in February 2026 "without any formal explanation for its about-face."
Transparency Versus Political Motivations
Advocates pushing for the release argue that the public has a right to review the primary materials to assess the transparency of the special counsel's probe. The Heritage Foundation, which initially sued for access under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), stated that the audio tapes are critical because they reportedly highlight early instances of Biden's memory gaps and aging before his presidency.
Concurrently, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan defended the legislative demand, asserting that the American public deserves to see the full records to uncover what he characterized as a concerted effort by Democrats to hide crucial data.
Biden's representatives have fiercely pushed back against the impending release, characterizing the sudden policy pivot as a purely partisan maneuver ahead of the midterms. In response, a federal judge has granted Biden the right to formally intervene, setting up a definitive judicial deadline before the scheduled June 15 distribution date.
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By: CNN Newsource
May 27, 2026


