⟡ “You Called It Emergency. We Filed for Discharge. Now the Archive Has Spoken and the Court Has Been Served.” ⟡
When the Law Is Abused in Silence, It Must Be Corrected in Writing — Publicly, Jurisdictionally, Elegantly.
Filed: 24 June 2025
Reference: SWANK/FAMILYCOURT/EPO-DISCHARGE-S44-FINAL
📎 Download PDF – 2025-06-24_SWANK_Application_FamilyCourt_Discharge_EPO_NoLocationDisclosure.pdf
Formal application submitted under Section 44(10) of the Children Act 1989 to discharge the Emergency Protection Order used by Westminster to remove four disabled U.S. citizen children.
I. What Happened
On 24 June 2025, Polly Chromatic filed a Section 44(10) application with the Family Division to discharge the Emergency Protection Order (EPO) granted to Westminster Children’s Services on 23 June 2025. That order was used to forcibly remove Regal, Prince, King, and Honor — all U.S. citizen children with chronic medical needs — without notice, threshold, or due process. The mother was excluded from proceedings due to documented disabilities (PTSD, asthma, muscle dysphonia) and her need for written-only access was ignored. The removal was retaliatory, unannounced, and procedurally opaque. The EPO was issued amid a live Judicial Review and an active £23M civil claim.
II. What the Complaint Establishes
The EPO was used to bypass ongoing legal action already filed
Parent was denied participation due to known medical access requirements
No risk threshold was established, nor was placement disclosed post-removal
Medical continuity was broken: four asthma patients missed transition of care
U.S. consular notification was never made — despite all four children being dual nationals
This wasn’t an order for protection. It was a theatre of jurisdiction staged without the subject present.
III. Why SWANK Logged It
Because you cannot claim protection while concealing placement.
Because no one signs off on child removal during hospital appointment season unless retaliation is the real motive.
Because Section 44(10) exists for exactly this: to call out EPOs used as shields for administrative misconduct.
Because the parent was excluded. The solicitor was ineffective. So we filed the law ourselves — and posted it in public.
Because you cannot redact a filing already published in the archive.
IV. Violations
Children Act 1989, Section 44(10) – EPO discharged due to lack of threshold, access, and transparency
Equality Act 2010, Section 20 – Disability access ignored in violation of written-only protocol
Human Rights Act 1998, Articles 6, 8, 14 – Fair hearing rights denied; family life disrupted; disabled litigant excluded
Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, Article 36 – No consular notification upon removal of U.S. citizens
UNCRPD and UNCRC – Violations of parental access, sibling unity, and medical safeguarding rights
V. SWANK’s Position
This wasn’t a care order. It was a jurisdictional ambush now subject to reversal.
This wasn’t a misunderstanding. It was a procedural hit job carried out while the system looked away.
This wasn’t a cry for review. It was a statutory demand for correction filed on time and in public.
SWANK hereby archives this Section 44(10) Application not as a plea — but as a discharge trigger activated by law, logged by evidence, and served to the world.
You ignored the parent.
You ignored the embassy.
You ignored the archive.
Now we file — and we don’t ask twice.
⟡ This Dispatch Has Been Formally Archived by SWANK London Ltd. ⟡
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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.
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