This paper presents a forensic case study of the unlawful termination of a Mental Health Crisis Breathing Space (MHCBS, BSS-0000371648) affecting a neurodivergent individual with multiple life-limiting diagnoses, and argues that the events documented constitute empirical validation of the Protective Paradox: the structural condition in which the more vulnerable a person is, the more likely that the institutions specifically designed to protect them will cause additional and compounding harm. Drawing on the Equilibrium Ledger theoretical framework, the Turing Theory of institutional cognition, and the three-phase model of Extraction, Rejection, and Appropriation developed in prior works within this programme, the paper demonstrates that the administrative failure responsible for the termination is not an isolated error but the expression of a deeper architectural pathology characterised by institutional bifurcation, procedural self-protection, and the systematic displacement of accountability onto the individuals least equipped to bear it. The paper further connects this case to active Equality Act 2010 litigation against the University of Oxford and the University of St Andrews, and to the structural inaccessibility of the Equality and Human Rights Commission as an enforcement mechanism. The paper concludes with a direct address to Parliament and to those who have already given up: the millions of neurodivergent, disabled, and mentally ill individuals who have learned, through repeated institutional failure, that asking for help is more dangerous than suffering in silence. This paper argues that their silence is not consent. It is the documented product of systems that were designed, consciously or not, to produce it.
Alessandro Grassini (Mon,) studied this question.