⟡ “You Removed Four Children. We Filed for Judicial Review. Welcome to the High Court.” ⟡
This Is Not a Correspondence. This Is a Litigation Notice Served with Velvet Contempt.
Filed: 24 June 2025
Reference: SWANK/COURT/JUDICIALREVIEW-FILED-01
π Download PDF – 2025-06-24_SWANK_JudicialReview_Westminster_RBKC_EmergencyReinstatement.pdf
Formal High Court filing of Judicial Review claim and emergency reinstatement request following retaliatory child removal.
I. What Happened
On 24 June 2025, Polly Chromatic, on behalf of SWANK London Ltd., formally served a Judicial Review claim to Westminster City Council and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. The claim challenges the retaliatory and procedurally unlawful removal of four U.S. citizen children on 22 June 2025 — an action executed without notice, threshold, or disability accommodations. The filing includes an emergency reinstatement request, psychiatric evidence, procedural addenda, and SWANK's public archive index. The defendants were instructed to acknowledge receipt and prepare to respond under High Court scrutiny.
II. What the Complaint Establishes
Westminster and RBKC acted in direct retaliation following legal audits and complaints
No lawful order was served or disclosed at the time of removal
Disability access needs were knowingly disregarded
Court documentation was withheld, misrepresented, or delivered improperly
The removal occurred while a civil claim and safeguarding audit were actively pending
This wasn’t local authority action. It was an institutional temper tantrum dressed in legal costume.
III. Why SWANK Logged It
Because this is not just a claim — it is a jurisdictional mirror.
Because they assumed the law would protect their actions. We’ve now invoked the law to review them.
Because retaliatory removal is not a social service. It is a constitutional malfunction.
Because Westminster and RBKC will now answer to the High Court — not through emails, but through evidence.
Because justice begins when the record interrupts the lie.
IV. Violations
Children Act 1989 – Removal without procedural safeguards or threshold
Equality Act 2010, Sections 20–29 – Failure to accommodate disability and retaliatory exclusion
Human Rights Act 1998, Articles 6 and 8 – Denial of fair hearing and interference with family life
UNCRC Articles 3, 9, 24 – Separation of children from parent without lawful process
Judicial Review Principles (Public Law) – Abuse of power, irrational decision-making, breach of procedural fairness
V. SWANK’s Position
This wasn’t safeguarding. It was strategic retaliation, executed at administrative speed.
This wasn’t a misunderstanding. It was a deliberate act of jurisdictional cruelty.
This wasn’t hidden. It was filed, timestamped, and archived in the High Court record.
SWANK has now entered litigation not just as a response — but as a historical correction.
This Judicial Review is not about restoring one family. It is about dismantling one fiction.
You called it safeguarding. We’re calling it out.
⟡ 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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