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It's not likely to be the plug.
I guess its possible that the headphones could be involved in some kind of feedback loop.... how loud do you have your headphones? If you have them quite loud and you put them close to the needle, then it could be that the sound waves coming from the headphones are causing the needle to vibrate more, which causes more soundwaves in the headphones, which causes the needle to vibrate more and so on ad infinitum.
The other possibility - and I can't be sure about this, I haven't done electronics for a long time - is that the headphones could be causing an induction loop, or there may even be a short somewhere. I can't be sure.
It happens with different headphones you say? Definitely its something to do with the mixer (I would say). Try swapping the mixer, borrow a friend's, anything. See if you get it with another mixer. If its just your mixer it happens with, I think its possible there could be a short in there somewhere, or the headphone output is bleeding into the TT input, or something like that. If its a new mixer you should be able to get it sorted under warranty. If not, you might have to get some electronics bod to have a look at it for you......
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