Chromatic v. The International Embarrassment Westminster Refuses to Anticipate
A consular-level safeguarding dossier from the SWANK Evidentiary Catalogue, documenting the emotional deterioration of Prerogative, a U.S. citizen minor held in UK State care — and the diplomatically embarrassing explanation offered by Westminster for his sudden disappearance from contact:
“he wants to go out.”
Based on formal correspondence sent to the U.S. Embassy and the Office of Children’s Issues, this dossier examines:
• Prerogative’s abrupt emotional collapse during supervised contact
• withdrawal, distress, and reliance on Regal, Kingdom, and Heir
• Westminster’s non-child-centred justification for missed contact
• the disruption of a pre-arranged Thanksgiving family session involving U.S. relatives
• the need for consular welfare monitoring due to UK agency inconsistencies
• cross-border implications for the welfare of four U.S. citizen children
This is not commentary.
This is a legal-aesthetic document — a SWANK archival artefact preserving the moment a Local Authority’s internal narrative became an international concern.
Ideal for:
• human-rights and safeguarding researchers
• diplomatic and consular analysts
• legal observers and family-court professionals
• families navigating international welfare disputes
• readers who appreciate elegant documentation of bureaucratic folly
A SWANK London Evidentiary Catalogue release.
Not edited. Not diluted. Only documented.
Buy this dossier and you’ll get a consular-grade record of Prerogative’s emotional collapse, Westminster’s implausible “he wants to go out” excuse, and the international implications of a U.S. citizen child in UK State care.