🖋 SWANK Dispatch | 9 February 2024
STOP ASKING. I’VE ALREADY ANSWERED.
Filed Under: Disability Disregard, Referral Repetition, Social Work Obsession, Institutional Harassment, Verbal Coercion Refusal, RBKC Misconduct
To: Samira Issa, Kensington & Chelsea Social Work Department
From: Noelle Meline, Medically Restricted / Legally Fortified
I will say this in progressively smaller fonts until the silence arrives:
I CANNOT BREATHE.
I CANNOT SPEAK ON THE PHONE.
I ALREADY RESPONDED.
I ALREADY RESPONDED.
I. ALREADY. RESPONDED.
You are now pursuing a fourth request for verbal contact regarding an incident that occurred on 2 January 2024 — an incident that has already been:
Documented
Discussed
Answered
Replied to in writing
Escalated to legal review
There is no new information.
There is no new incident.
There is no reason to contact me again.
Yet here we are.
With you asking again:
“Would you be able to meet with me in person?”
As if my medical conditions are optional.
As if your emails are therapeutic.
As if my lungs are your scheduling tool.
Let’s review what you’ve chosen to ignore:
“I cannot breathe.”
“I cannot talk on the phone.”
“I will not stress my lungs by speaking.”
“This same issue has already been addressed by social services.”
“Nothing new has happened.”
“You are wasting my time.”
“Leave me alone.”
Your behaviour now constitutes:
Repeated contact against medical advice
Retaliatory safeguarding initiated after formal complaints
Refusal to honour disability adjustments under the Equality Act 2010
Emotional harm caused by persistent disregard and coercive tactics
You are not supporting.
You are not safeguarding.
You are provoking collapse in a medically compromised woman with four children.
Cease all further contact.
This is your final notice.
All correspondence is now part of an active legal file.
Noelle Meline
Voice withheld. Boundaries enforced.
📩 complaints@swankarchive.com
Labels: harassment, disability breach, statutory failure, written mandate ignored, safeguarding retaliation, exhausted mother, RBKC disgrace, repeated referrals, forced escalation, social work obsession, No means No