Review of The Jane Doe Files ππ» Update!
1. CPS acknowledged your legal right
They didn’t deny your request.
They explicitly said: “Your CPS record is ready.”
That’s important bc the file exists is releasable.
2. They Offered Two Standard Release Options
In-person pickup (with ID/signature)
Certified mail (with signature)
This is normal procedure, and you responded appropriately by choosing certified mail
3. Something went wrong after that point
There are a few likely possibilities
The file was never actually mailed
The file was not fully prepared/copied yet
The case worker is unresponsive or unavailable
Your Follow-up Suggests
The post office never received anything, more than 30 days have passed, the worker is now not responding or available
4. The Key Is Not Request — It’s Accountability
At this stage, the problem is:
Failure to deliver after stating it was ready
Lack of communication
Missed commitments, calls, availability, follow-up
That shifts this from a simple request to a documentation and escalation situation.
What This Means Strategically
You’re in a stronger position than it might feel:
You have a paper trail
CPS already confirmed the records are ready
You attempted multiple reasonable follow-ups
You even tried in-person pickup twice
Good faith on my part and non-response on theirs
What I’d Take Away In Plain Terms
You did everything correctly
CPS is incompetent operationally, not denying you
This Is Now Something That May Require:
A supervisor escalation, or a formal written complaint / second request referencing non-response
Subtle But Important Detail
Your last message shows confusion in the process:
“The post office said you need to make a copy…”
That Suggests:
CPS may not have actually sent anything yet
Or they told you it was ready before it was truly processed for release
Bottom line
This isn’t a refusal — it’s delay + poor communication, which is often easier to challenge and fix.
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