As these things often do, it began with someone wanting to do the right thing by his family. Ed Mansell spent decades accumulating LEGO Star Wars sets. He patiently bought sealed boxes and rare minifigures, and it only makes sense when you see them all spread out on shelves. In 2023, he was 83 years old and his health was getting worse. His son Bryan decided it was time to sell. The plan was smart and quietly moving: use the money to pay for the grandchildren’s schooling. What came next was not simple at all.
Bryan took the collection to a Bricks and Minifigs store in Salem, Oregon. It has about 780 sealed sets and 1,200 rare minifigures that are worth up to $200,000. In November 2023, he made a deal with the store’s owners, Chrystal Law-Gorman and her husband, to sell things on consignment. People knew what a good store it was. It looked like the right choice. Money was sent for a few months. About $15,000 worth. After that, the franchise fell apart.
The story splits into different versions after what happened next, and things become really difficult to figure out. The Gorman family told Bricks and Minifigs corporate in November 2024 that their store was bankrupt because it owed nearly $200,000 in royalties and debts. Corporate moved quickly to get two new franchisees to take their place. The Mansell family says the collection was still inside when it was given to the other person. According to security footage, Chrystal told one of the new owners that the goods in the store didn’t belong to the store. The people who just bought it say there wasn’t much left when they got there. Their account doesn’t make sense.
Here’s where Ben Schneider comes in. The YouTuber, who goes by the name “Reckless Ben” online, took the story and ran with it, making videos, looking into it, and getting into fights on camera. As is often the case with these accountability-style deep dives on YouTube, the video went viral, attracting millions of viewers who thought, for better or worse, they were seeing a family get cheated on in slow motion. The company that makes Bricks and Minifigs said in a statement that their records show the collection sold for over $61,000 during that time, while Bryan may have only gotten about $15,000. They said it was a difference that they are still looking into. That admission, which is buried in business speak, is important. It means something went wrong, even though people are still arguing about who is to blame.

The law part has moved quickly and sloppily. Schneider was temporarily banned from posting content about Bricks and Minifigs by a state court in Utah. This immediately raised First Amendment concerns. Later, that order was replaced by a federal preliminary injunction signed by U.S. District Judge David Barlow. This injunction lets people talk about the case in public, but Schneider and his friends still have to stay at least 100 meters away from any Bricks and Minifigs location. The case itself is now being looked at for federal jurisdiction, but nothing has been decided yet. It’s still not clear if moving to federal court will speed things up or just add another step to the process.
The crime part makes things more difficult. Schneider showed up at the home office of Bricks and Minifigs in December, and the company’s CEO, Ammon McNeff, called the police. Different people have very different stories about what happened that day. Police say McNeff told them that Schneider’s group had threatened to kill people and burn down the offices. In a later video, Schneider played sound that made it sound like the scene wasn’t nearly as dramatic—that they just left when asked. He was eventually charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing, not the more serious felony that the police officer said might happen. From the outside, it’s impossible to know for sure if that shows how bad what happened really was or if it means something else.
More than 300 independent Bricks and Minifigs franchise owners have been caught in the crossfire of a social media campaign that doesn’t always tell the difference between a troubled franchise and the whole network. These people had nothing to do with any of this. It costs money to do that, even if the campaign is for a good reason. Schneider’s supporters would say that being accountable means being uncomfortable. The franchisees who are being harassed would say that they didn’t agree to this.
There’s a sense that the story was always going to end in a bad place. Not because everyone is bad, but because of a franchise system with weak oversight, a bad handover, and a family with no legal power. These factors created an environment where things could go wrong quietly and stay wrong for a long time. It was loud because of the cameras.

