DA-133

Redacted Family: Elevated Risk

Secure Containment Guidelines:

DA-133-1 and DA-133-2 are to be contained separately within adjacent standard anomaly chambers at Site-█. Both objects must remain mounted on opposing walls at a minimum distance of 12 meters from one another. Under no circumstances are DA-133-1 and DA-133-2 to be placed within direct line of sight simultaneously without prior authorisation.

Observation periods are limited to fifteen minutes per session. Personnel assigned to DA-133 must rotate weekly to minimize long-term psychological exposure. Any staff reporting intrusive thoughts relating to nonexistent family members, childhood memory inconsistencies, or unexplained emotional attachment toward the anomalies are to undergo immediate psychiatric screening and Class-C amnestic treatment, as approved by The Council if necessary.

Photography of DA-133 is permitted only through CODA-issued filtered imaging equipment. Unfiltered digital images have demonstrated minor memetic properties, particularly when viewed repeatedly over extended periods. Testing involving interaction between DA-133-1 and DA-133-2 has been indefinitely suspended.

Description:

DA-133 is a dual-component anomalous object consisting of DA-133-1, a framed minimalist family portrait, and DA-133-2, a decorative wall arrangement surrounding a central plaque displaying the word "FAMILY”.

DA-133-1 is a white rectangular frame containing six simplistic humanoid figures arranged in descending size order. The figures possess no facial details, clothing, or identifiable features. Despite this, observers frequently report recognizing the silhouettes as specific individuals from their own lives. Descriptions vary drastically between subjects, with no two accounts remaining consistent.

Extended observation of DA-133-1 produces gradual autobiographical distortion. Subjects begin recalling events involving additional siblings, relatives, or family members who never existed. In many cases, subjects become emotionally distressed when confronted with evidence disproving these memories. Cognitive scans suggest the anomaly actively rewrites associative memory pathways rather than implanting direct hallucinations.

DA-133-2 consists of four empty black picture frames positioned around a wooden decorative plaque spelling "FAMILY” with 10 spaces for pictures directly around the plaque. The empty frames and pictures also display anomalous behavior when observed indirectly. Peripheral vision sightings commonly include blurred humanoid figures standing within the frames despite no physical presence being recorded. Motion-sensitive cameras have occasionally captured single-frame distortions resembling unidentified individuals positioned inside the empty spaces.

When DA-133-1 and DA-133-2 are placed within visual proximity of one another, the anomalies become significantly more active. Personnel exposed during testing described hearing faint domestic noises, including conversations, laughter, and footsteps originating from unoccupied rooms nearby. Several subjects insisted additional framed photographs had appeared on surrounding walls despite no physical changes occurring.

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