Your posts are very difficult to read and ramble all over the place. It isn't clear what your actual legal question is, as opposed to a general gripe session about how you have been treated over the past 30ish years.
You can't press charges, nor can the police. That is up to the state. You can file in civil court if you like, but no one can insist on criminal charges against another person. Blaming the police for not filing charges at your request is like blaming your mechanic for your kitchen sink being stopped up. Wrong party.
If you drove without a license, you knowingly broke the law. It is no one's fault but your own if that act caught up to you. It is difficult to follow what happened with the attorney but while someone is your legal representative, certain things you tell them are privileged. They can not act on that knowledge except in extreme cases. Once you fire them, privilege no longer exists. As an officer of the court, there are things they are ethically obligated to report.
If someone took your money or belongings and you know who that someone is, there isn't much for the police to investigate. Your remedy is to sue them for the value of whatever they took in civil court. It is not automatically a criminal offense and again, it is not up to the police to decide what events are worthy of prosecution. A criminal prosecution also wouldn't get your stuff back. You would still need civil court for that- possibly small claims court if we are talking $3K.
If some unauthorized person is accessing your bank account (and it isn't clear how that could happen from what you describe) take it up with your bank. It really isn't a police matter.
You can't press charges, nor can the police. That is up to the state. You can file in civil court if you like, but no one can insist on criminal charges against another person. Blaming the police for not filing charges at your request is like blaming your mechanic for your kitchen sink being stopped up. Wrong party.
If you drove without a license, you knowingly broke the law. It is no one's fault but your own if that act caught up to you. It is difficult to follow what happened with the attorney but while someone is your legal representative, certain things you tell them are privileged. They can not act on that knowledge except in extreme cases. Once you fire them, privilege no longer exists. As an officer of the court, there are things they are ethically obligated to report.
If someone took your money or belongings and you know who that someone is, there isn't much for the police to investigate. Your remedy is to sue them for the value of whatever they took in civil court. It is not automatically a criminal offense and again, it is not up to the police to decide what events are worthy of prosecution. A criminal prosecution also wouldn't get your stuff back. You would still need civil court for that- possibly small claims court if we are talking $3K.
If some unauthorized person is accessing your bank account (and it isn't clear how that could happen from what you describe) take it up with your bank. It really isn't a police matter.