⟡ “They Took the Children on Sunday. This Is the Document That Speaks for Me in Court — Because They Never Let Me Speak Before.” ⟡
A mother silenced by law speaks through archive. No hearing. No voice. Now: jurisdictional prose.
Filed: 23 June 2025
Reference: SWANK/FAMCOURT/0622-RETURNHEARING-POSITION
π Download PDF – 2025-06-22_SWANK_Statement_CareOrder_ReturnHearingPosition.pdf
Formal Position Statement submitted after procedural removal of four U.S. citizen children from a disabled parent without representation or accessible notice.
I. What Happened
On 23 June 2025 at 1:37 PM, four children — all U.S. citizens — were removed from their London home by UK authorities. The mother, Polly Chromatic, was not informed. She was not heard. She could not speak. No order was shown. No hearing transcript was provided.
In the aftermath, this Position Statement was filed — because she will be present at the next hearing, whether or not her voice is permitted.
II. What the Complaint Establishes
No accessible notice of hearing
No legal representation provided
No order presented at the time of removal
Active legal proceedings were already underway (Judicial Review + civil claim)
The parent is medically nonverbal — a fact known to all agencies involved
All four children were removed without legal process that complied with disability or family law
This statement lays out the facts, the failures, and the demands — all in writing, because no one in court has yet offered anything else.
III. Why SWANK Logged It
Because Position Statements are not just documents — they are restorative records.
Because when a disabled parent is excluded from a hearing, the system cannot pretend it was just process.
Because every sentence here restores what they tried to erase: her lawful place in that courtroom.
Because Polly’s voice has always been the archive — and this is how it speaks.
IV. Violations
Equality Act 2010 – failure to accommodate; exclusion of a disabled litigant
Human Rights Act 1998 – Articles 6 (fair trial) and 8 (family life)
Family Procedure Rules – procedural defects and no service
Children Act 1989 – lack of lawful threshold or proportionality
Safeguarding Regulations – misused to retaliate, not protect
V. SWANK’s Position
We do not accept that the law can remove four children while excluding the mother from the room.
We do not accept that disability is an excuse for silence.
We do not accept that an archive can be erased by removing children at 1:37 PM.
We do not accept any process that bypasses consent, court access, or due process.
We do not accept that her voice was missing.
It was simply not spoken. It was written — and now, archived.
⟡ This Dispatch Has Been Formally Archived by SWANK London Ltd. ⟡ Every entry is timestamped. Every sentence is jurisdictional. Every structure is protected. To mimic this format without licence is not homage. It is breach. We do not permit imitation. We preserve it as evidence. This is not a blog. This is a legal-aesthetic instrument. Filed with velvet contempt, preserved for future litigation. Because evidence deserves elegance. And retaliation deserves an archive. © 2025 SWANK London Ltd. All formatting and structural rights reserved. Use requires express permission or formal licence. Unlicensed mimicry will be cited — as panic, not authorship.
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