Serious cross-system
Reference: HMW-AI-LIC-1984-NC-GOV | 24/06/1873
From: Michael P. Lennon Jr
Jurisdiction: United Kingdom / Ireland
To whom it concerns,
I am writing to give formal notice of a serious cross-system failure involving the handling of my personal data, legal position, health context, and related regulatory issues.
I am not alleging drama. I am alleging disorder.
My concern is simple: multiple systems appear to be handling connected facts as though they are unrelated, and the result is distortion.
1. My position
I am one person.
However, my information has been handled across separate systems, including:
court proceedings
health records
financial records
regulatory and complaint channels
Each system appears to hold part of the picture. None appears to be holding the whole.
That is where the problem begins.
2. The core issue
The issue is not that every individual action is obviously unlawful in isolation.
The issue is that, taken together, the systems appear to be:
fragmented
delayed
incomplete in context
and poorly integrated
That creates a serious risk of decisions being made on partial truth.
A system can be technically active and still be functionally wrong. That is the position I am now raising.
3. Plain English version
Here is the plain truth.
If my health context is separated from my legal context, and my legal context is separated from my financial context, then the final outcome is not reliable.
That is not clarity.
That is administrative guesswork wearing a tie.
4. Data protection concern
I am raising concern that my data may not have been processed in a way that is:
accurate
fair
properly contextualised
or transparent enough for lawful understanding
My concern is not just about what data exists.
It is about how that data has been interpreted, separated, and acted on.
5. Digital services and transparency concern
I am also raising concern about digital platform handling, including moderation, transparency, and the explanation of automated or semi-automated decisions.
Where platforms hold data, shape visibility, restrict content, or fail to explain decisions, the user is placed at a structural disadvantage.
If the platform knows what it is doing but the user does not, that is not transparency. That is imbalance.
6. Maladministration concern
In plain English, maladministration means poor handling by systems that should know better.
That includes:
delay
omission
failure to explain
failure to connect relevant facts
and failure to deal with a person as a whole case rather than a set of disconnected files
That is the concern here.
7. Why this matters
This is not just about inconvenience.
When systems fail to join the dots properly, the effects are real:
confusion
delay
reduced agency
unfair procedural pressure
and loss of trust in institutions that are meant to act lawfully and coherently
8. What I am asking for
I am asking for the following:
Acknowledgement that this matter involves cross-system interaction risk
Review of whether relevant decisions were made without full context
Proper consideration of health, legal, financial, and regulatory material together, not in silos
Clear explanation of what data has been used, how it has been interpreted, and by whom
Corrective action where records, process, or interpretation have created distortion or unfairness
9. My final position
I am not challenging the existence of institutions.
I am challenging the failure of connected institutions to see connected reality.
A system that cannot interpret the whole picture is not in control of outcomes.
It is simply reacting to fragments and calling that order.
That is not good enough.
Closing
This notice is made in good faith and for formal consideration.
I ask that it be read on its substance, not dismissed by bureaucracy, delay, or the usual sludge that appears whenever clarity gets too close to the bone.
Michael P. Lennon Jr
https://www.reportfraud.police.uk/ http://www.mindspireblogs.co.uk/2026/04/hmw-ai-lic-1984-nc-gov-and-cccv1.html
+7760354794
https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/cons/en/html
https://www.mindspireblogs.co.uk/2026/04/the-rule-of-law-ireland-and-great.html
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