When events are placed in chronological order, a clear pattern emerges — based on documented records, not opinions.
The allegation occurred first.
The evidence did not support it.
Despite that, the consequences continued.
Medical professionals found no injury consistent with abuse.
Later DCFS records contradicted the original allegation.
Key information surfaced only after significant legal and personal harm had already occurred.
The timeline reflects how the process unfolded — and how outcomes diverged from the initial claim.
Key Takeaways from the Record
• An accusation-initiated law enforcement and DCFS involvement
• Independent medical evidence did not support the allegation
• Supervised visitation followed despite neutral findings
• DCFS documentation later assigned responsibility elsewhere
• Critical details emerged after consequences were already imposed
This sequence is drawn directly from medical evaluations, agency records, and dated documentation.
Why This Matters
Timelines reveal consistency, credibility, and accountability.
When facts are reviewed in order, they show how conclusions were reached — and where they did not align with the evidence.
This page exists to present that record clearly and transparently.
Additional Context for Readers
Timelines are critical in high-impact cases because decisions are often made before all facts are known. Early allegations can trigger immediate legal and administrative actions, while evidence review, medical evaluation, and agency findings frequently occur later. Once restrictions are imposed, they are not always lifted simply because later records contradict the original claim.
This timeline does not argue intent or motive. It documents sequence.
By reviewing dated records side-by-side, readers can see:
- When actions were taken versus when evidence became available
- How early assumptions influenced later outcomes
- How corrective information emerged after consequences were already in place
Chronology matters because credibility, reliability, and proportionality can only be evaluated when events are viewed in order — not in isolation.
This page exists to slow the narrative down and allow the record to speak for itself.
Disclaimer
All information on this page is based on documented records, medical evaluations, and official agency findings. Content is presented for informational purposes only.