The $200,000 LEGO Collection That Could Send Someone to Prison in Galveston, Texas
And why every collector in Galveston and Harris County should pay attention.
By Tad Nelson — Board Certified Lawyer — Explaining Fraud and the Relationship When There Is a Fiduciary Duty Involved
A few months ago, the internet became obsessed with what looked like a simple dispute over a collection of LEGO Star Wars sets.
But this wasn’t a fight over toys.
It was a fight over property worth roughly $200,000, allegations of fraud, claims of stolen consigned merchandise, a federal lawsuit, criminal charges against a YouTuber, and a viral controversy that has generated hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations and millions of views online.
And if the same facts happened in Texas, someone could be looking at a first–degree felony punishable by up to life in prison.
Let me say that again.
A pile of plastic bricks from a galaxy far, far away — in the right circumstances under Texas law — could send a Texas store owner to prison for life.
If that surprises you, you are exactly the person who needs to read this blog all the way to the bottom. I’m Tad Nelson, Board Certified criminal defense attorney, League City office, more than three decades in Texas courtrooms. Let’s walk through it.
First, the Actual Story — And It Is Wilder Than You Think
Here is what actually happened, because the details are too good to skip.
In 2023, an 83–year–old retiree in Oregon named Ed Mansell sat on a collection of LEGO Star Wars sets he had been building since the early 1990s.
Three decades of patience. Original boxes. Sealed sets from movies that came out before half the YouTubers in this story were born. The kind of collection a grandfather builds while telling a grandkid about the first time he saw the Death Star on a big screen.
His son Bryan walked the entire collection into a Bricks & Minifigs franchise in Keizer, Oregon — a national chain of LEGO resale shops headquartered up in Provo, Utah — and signed a consignment agreement with the store’s owner. The deal was simple. The store would sell items from the collection, take a cut, and Bryan would come in once a month to pick up his share and check the inventory.
For about a year, it worked the way it was supposed to. Smiles. Receipts. Father proud. Son grateful. The kind of arrangement everybody hopes a consignment is.
Then, in November 2024, the franchise changed hands.
Two new owners took over the location. According to the Mansell family, the new owners refused to honor the consignment agreement.
They would not return the unsold inventory. They would not pay out the proceeds. Corporate eventually piled on, calling the original deal an “unauthorized personal consignment” the franchisor never knew about — which is corporate-speak for we are washing our hands of an 83-year-old man’s plastic.
That is when things got weird.
A 30-year-old YouTuber named Benjamin Schneider — who goes by “Reckless Ben” online — picked up the story and turned it into a series of investigative videos. The internet, doing what the internet does, lit it up.
Tens of millions of views. A GoFundMe set up to fund the Mansell family’s legal fees crossed $445,000. That is more than twice the disputed value of the LEGOs themselves. Strangers donated more to defend the principle than the collection was worth.
Then Reckless Ben drove from Oregon to Utah, parked outside one of the franchise owners’ homes with cameras and signs, and was promptly arrested by the American Fork Police Department on charges of stalking, residential targeted picketing, disorderly conduct, and trespassing.
He was arrested, by the way, twice. In a week. With a search warrant for his Airbnb.
Meanwhile, the original franchise owners filed their own lawsuit against Bricks & Minifigs corporate for what they call a “wrongful seizure” of their store.
Corporate fired back with a federal RICO lawsuit against Reckless Ben, Bryan Mansell, and a long list of internet sleuths, alleging an organized “harassment and extortion campaign.”
The Salem-area store was permanently closed on June 4, 2026, in what the company politely described as a “mutual agreement to part ways” with the new franchise owners.
And as of this writing, Ed Mansell still has not gotten his LEGOs back.
Let me read that back to you one more time.
An 83-year-old retired man handed his decades-old plastic-toy collection to a national franchise. Two years later, that collection has produced at least three lawsuits, federal RICO claims, a YouTuber in handcuffs (twice), a permanent store closure, $445,000 in viral donations, an internet civil war, and a real possibility of criminal charges before this is over.
Over LEGOs. Not gold. Not a Picasso. Not a vintage Corvette. Plastic Star Wars bricks.
Now — imagine all of that happens in Galveston instead of Oregon. Picture the senior citizen as a retired NASA contractor from Clear Lake. Picture the franchise as a comic shop on Westheimer or a card store on FM 518. Picture the YouTuber as a podcaster from The Heights with a Ring camera in his back pocket and a dash cam pointed at someone’s front door.
Under Texas law, that case looks very different. And the part where someone could go to prison — possibly for life — is the part nobody on Reddit is talking about.
Let’s get into it.
1 Wait — How Can LEGO Grand Theft Lead to a Life Sentence?
Because Texas doesn’t care whether the property is LEGO sets, Pokémon and Magic: The Gathering cards, Rolex, Patek Philippe, or Omega watches, sports memorabilia and game-used jerseys, vintage Houston Astros and Houston Oilers collectibles, NASA memorabilia, flown patches and Apollo-era artifacts, an automobile, classic cars from the seventies, eighties, and nineties, offshore equipment, oilfield artifacts, antique watches, rare coins, bullion, a firearm, or a wine cellar stocked with limited bottle releases, and theft of a firearm can also be treated especially seriously under Texas law.
Texas cares about value.
A collection worth $200,000 is not a hobby.
It’s an asset.
Under Texas law, the dollar value is what triggers the grade of the offense — not the nostalgia, not the romance, not the fact that someone’s eight-year-old grandkid built half of it with him on a Saturday.
And when someone entrusts that asset to a store, auction house, reseller, broker, pawn shop, or consignment dealer, a whole different set of laws come into play — laws that most people, frankly, have never heard of until the morning they walk in and the back room is empty.
2 Why This Matters in the Port City of Galveston and Harris County
I practice law in League City — right in the middle of the I-45 corridor between Houston and Galveston, a port city of 53,695 as of the 2020 census with a rich history and a distinct local culture. I’m about fifteen minutes from the cruise terminal and a half hour from the Harris County Civil Courthouse downtown. I have been doing this for more than thirty years.
You would be amazed how many people in this area own collections worth tens, or hundreds, of thousands of dollars.
This is collector country, with 32 miles of shoreline and a strong mix of locals and visitors moving through the area year-round.
Between Clear Lake, Kemah, Friendswood, Pearland, Texas City, Galveston, Pasadena, La Porte, Webster, Dickinson, and on into Sugar Land and The Woodlands — we have a population of engineers, retired NASA contractors, refinery workers, energy executives, Gulf Coast fishing captains, gun collectors who grew up hunting south Texas, and ex-pro athletes who played for the Astros, Oilers, Rockets, Texans, Dynamo, or U of H.
Everybody collects something. The local community is shaped in part by attractions and events like Mardi Gras, the Galveston Island Historic Pleasure Pier, and Moody Gardens, which also includes a botanical park and other entertainment options, and gives people plenty of ways to explore local attractions and civic resources. July is another especially busy time for island events and visitors.
I have met clients with vintage Astros and Houston Oilers memorabilia worth more than their pickup trucks. Clients with NASA collectibles from former contractors in Clear Lake — some of them flown in space. Clients with high-end firearms collections passed down four generations of Texas hunters, and rare coin and bullion stashes from oilfield workers who never trusted banks.
Clients with sports cards ranging from ’86 Astros rookies to graded modern Pokémon. Designer handbags, luxury watches, and estate jewelry from River Oaks and Memorial. Comic books in original mylar from the seventies — some bought at the original Bedrock City in Houston when the owner was still running the register himself. Offshore equipment, oilfield artifacts, and historic rig hardware that probably belongs in a museum, sitting in a Friendswood garage.
Classic cars stored in a Galveston Strand garage near the Victorian architecture, avenues named with letters, and the shops along the waterfront. Bourbon, wine, and limited-release whiskey collections worth more than most people’s emergency fund.
Galveston also draws collectors and tourists to historic sites including the tall ship Elissa, old ships along the waterfront, and more than 1,500 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places, with parts of the historic area only a few blocks from the shoreline.
It is also frequently cited as one of the most haunted cities in America, a reputation tied to that historic character.
Many of these collections are worth more than the owner’s vehicle. Some are worth more than the owner’s house.
And every single year, people in this area consign these items to stores, brokers, auction companies, estate liquidators, and online sellers. Most transactions go smoothly.
Some don’t.
When they don’t — the case lands in front of a Galveston County or Harris County judge. And when that happens, the difference between a five-figure problem and a felony conviction usually comes down to two things: paperwork, and how fast the owner called a lawyer.
3 The Texas Problem: Petty Theft — “I Didn’t Steal It. I Just Didn’t Give It Back.”
That’s where things get dangerous.
Most people think theft only happens when someone physically takes property — a snatch off a porch, a smash-and-grab at Galleria, a stolen catalytic converter from a Pearland driveway, or keeping a “found” cell phone.
Texas law is much broader than that — for example, the legal issue is not limited to someone physically carrying off property.
If someone accepts property for consignment, sale, storage, or safekeeping — and then refuses to return it, lies about what happened to it, or quietly sells it for themselves — a Texas prosecutor may look at any of the following:
- Theft under Texas Penal Code § 31.03
- Misapplication of Fiduciary Property under § 32.45
- Fraud–related offenses across Chapter 32 of the Penal Code
- Securing execution of document by deception (when there are signed contracts in play)
Criminal defense in these cases can also involve related felony and even traffic-violation matters when a broader investigation is underway.
All graded by value.
In Texas theft cases, the grade is determined by the value and character of the stolen goods or goods stolen, and lower-value conduct may be charged as a misdemeanor.
And in Texas, the grading is straightforward and brutal. Property worth $2,500 to $30,000 is a state jail felony. From $30,000 to $150,000, you are sitting on a third-degree felony — 2 to 10 years.
From $150,000 to $300,000, it becomes a second-degree felony, 2 to 20 years in prison. And the moment the value crosses $300,000, you are in first–degree felony territory — 5 to 99 years or life.
At $200,000? You’re already in second-degree felony territory. That’s the same range as some aggravated robberies.
If the value climbs to $300,000 — or if an enhancement applies, which I will get to in a minute — you are sitting in the same punishment range as murder in some Texas cases. That is not an exaggeration. That is the Penal Code.
Valuation disputes and document-heavy cases often require forensic science or forensic review to prepare trial representation.
The objects change. The law doesn’t. A pallet of LEGOs and a pallet of Picassos are graded by the same statute.
A Word on “Fiduciary Property” — The One Statute Nobody Mentions
Most people have never heard the word “fiduciary” outside of an estate-planning meeting.
In plain English: when you hand your property to someone with the understanding that they are holding it for your benefit — they have become a fiduciary. Whether they signed a paper that uses that word or not.
Consignment agreements create fiduciary relationships under Texas law. So do bailment agreements. So do safekeeping arrangements. So do certain storage contracts.
And Texas Penal Code § 32.45 — Misapplication of Fiduciary Property — makes it a crime for a fiduciary to misapply the property in a way that puts the owner at substantial risk of loss.
For high-dollar cases, misapplication of fiduciary property charges in Texas can carry penalties rivaling the most serious white-collar crimes.
The grading mirrors theft. Same dollar thresholds. Same felony ladder.
This is the statute that turns a polite “consignment dispute” into a felony case in front of a Texas grand jury. And it is the one that the Bricks & Minifigs scandal practically reads from.
The Part Nobody Talks About: Elder Victims
The original collector in the LEGO story was reportedly 83 years old.
That matters in Texas. A lot.
Texas has enhanced protections for elderly victims. Under § 32.45(d) and several related sections, if the beneficiary of the fiduciary property is 65 years or older, the offense bumps up an entire felony category.
So in Texas, that same $200,000 case — second-degree felony on its face — turns into a first-degree felony just because the victim is a senior.
First degree.
5 to 99 years.
Or life.
And in Harris County and Galveston County, allegations involving elderly victims get fast-tracked. Local prosecutors will move on these cases quickly, especially when there is a viral component or local media attention. The Texas Attorney General also runs a Crimes Against the Elderly division that occasionally takes a hand in cases the locals refer up.
Around here — with the retiree population in Friendswood, the Clear Lake snowbirds, the old NASA folks who never left, and the Galveston historic-district residents who have been holding family heirlooms for half a century — the elder enhancement comes up far more often than people realize.
The Civil Side: When Calling the DA Isn’t Enough
Sometimes the District Attorney passes.
Sometimes the case is too complicated, the evidence is too thin, the conduct is in a gray area, or the prosecutor’s caseload is buried under more serious matters — violent crime in Harris County, narcotics on the island, the daily DWI docket in League City.
When that happens, Texas still gives the victim a path. If the underlying dispute also involves personal injury, victims may seek compensation for medical expenses and lost wages.
Because misapplication of fiduciary funds under Texas law is a criminal offense, there is often a parallel civil track where victims pursue restitution and damages.
Galveston clients often look for a full-service law firm that can evaluate both property-loss and personal-injury exposure.
Two paths are available — and both are powerful, and claims review consultations are free as part of that service.
1. The Texas Theft Liability Act (Civil Practice & Remedies Code, Chapter 134).
Lets the victim sue civilly for actual damages, statutory damages of up to $1,000, plus attorney’s fees and court costs. You don’t need a criminal conviction to use it. You don’t even need the DA to file charges.
2. The Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA, Business & Commerce Code, Chapter 17).
When a Texas merchant misrepresents what they will do with consigned property, hides the truth, or engages in “unconscionable” conduct, the DTPA can authorize treble economic damages — three times your loss — plus attorney’s fees.
Three times $200,000 plus your lawyer is the kind of number that gets a Houston merchant’s attention quick.
Most importantly: civil cases run on their own track. The criminal case can be moving — or sitting — and the civil case keeps going.
7 What If You’re the One Being Accused of Identity Theft?
Now flip the script.
Maybe you own a shop in Webster. Maybe you run an estate sale company out of Texas City. Maybe you took over a franchise location in Pearland and inherited a back-room mess that wasn’t yours. Maybe someone walked into your store with a viral camera crew before they walked in with an attorney.
Don’t talk to anybody. Especially not the police.
Not the alleged victim. Not their family. Not a YouTuber on your sidewalk. Not the detective who calls and says “we just want to clear this up.” Not your CPA. Not your in-laws.
Call a lawyer.
The defenses to this kind of case are real, and Texas law recognizes most of them.
There is lack of intent. Theft and misapplication both require a culpable mental state under the Penal Code. A bookkeeping mistake, a missed entry, a clerk who put the wrong box on the wrong shelf — those are not felonies.
There is mistake of fact. If you genuinely believed you owned the property or had authority over it, the state has a problem proving the case.
There is lack of fiduciary relationship. The deal you signed may not actually be consignment under Texas law. The label on the form does not control. What the parties actually intended does.
There is authorization. If the consignor agreed to the disposition — even informally, even by silence over time — the criminal exposure changes.
And maybe most importantly, there is the value fight. The dollar value of the property drives the grade of the felony. If your defense team can knock $200,000 down to $80,000 with a credible appraisal, you have just moved the entire case down two felony grades. That is not a procedural win. That is the difference between probation and prison.
These cases are won and lost on documentation, on appraisals, on what was said and when, and on what the prosecutor can actually prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
That is the kind of work Tad Nelson & Associates’ Galveston criminal defense team was built for.
Five Things Every Texas Collector Should Do
1. Get Everything in Writing
A handshake is not a contract.
Your written consignment agreement should describe the property by serial number, photograph, or catalog number; the commission split; the payout schedule; the procedure for return of unsold inventory; and — critically — what happens if the store changes ownership.
2. Photograph Everything
Every item.
Every box.
Every serial number.
Date-stamped, on your phone, backed up to two cloud services. If your collection ever shows up across a Houston courtroom, those photos are your case.
3. Get an Independent Appraisal
Don’t wait until there’s a dispute.
A neutral, written appraisal from a credentialed expert — obtained before the consignment — is the single strongest piece of evidence you can have when value becomes the fight.
4. Verify Who You’re Actually Doing Business With
The individual?
The franchise?
The corporation?
Get the answer in writing. The Bricks & Minifigs mess turned partly on whether the corporate franchisor ever “knew about” the deal. Don’t let that fight happen in your case.
5. Don’t Wait
Texas has a two–year statute of limitations for most personal property and tort claims. Criminal statutes vary by offense. The longer you wait, the harder recovery becomes — and the messier the case gets for the lawyer who eventually picks it up.
If you smell trouble, you don’t wait six months hoping it resolves. You make the call. That call is free.
The Bigger Lesson
The internet sees a viral LEGO story.
Lawyers see something very different.
We see a case involving alleged theft and alleged fraud. Consignment agreements and fiduciary obligations. Elder-victim issues. Potential civil lawsuits running parallel to potential criminal exposure. Potential federal exposure under RICO and mail/wire fraud statutes. All in one matter. All over one man’s plastic.
And those same issues show up in Galveston County and Harris County every single year. Galveston was established as a port in 1825, after Jean Lafitte established the pirate colony of Campeche on the island in 1817, and even served as the capital of the Republic of Texas in 1836, when interim president David G. Burnet relocated the government there.
It was incorporated in 1839 by the Republic of Texas, became the first city in Texas to light its streets with gas lamps in 1856, and had reached 37,000 residents by the end of the 19th century.
Its commercial importance earned it the name “Wall Street of the South,” and Texas’s first bank and post office were established there. It was also a major immigration gateway, with the Galveston Movement diverting 10,000 Jewish immigrants from 1907 to 1914, second only to Ellis Island, and is recognized as the birthplace of the Juneteenth holiday.
After the 1900 hurricane killed an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 people, the city raised the grade of the entire island by up to 17 feet, and the city council became part of the island’s governing structure and local power during the recovery period. City government has long depended on officials and employees to carry out policy and development decisions.
The objects change.
The law doesn’t.
Whether it’s a $50,000 sneaker collection consigned to a shop in The Heights, a vintage Astros card collection handed off to a broker in Friendswood, a NASA artifact from a Clear Lake estate, or a firearms collection going through an FFL in Texas City — the underlying legal questions are the same as the ones currently playing out for an 83-year-old man in Oregon, including who has access to the property, inventory records, and sale information when a dispute arises.
And the answers — the Texas answers — are the ones I just walked you through.
Call Tad Nelson & Associates
If you are accused of theft, fraud, misapplication of fiduciary property, or any other financial crime — or if someone has wrongfully retained property that belongs to you — speak with an attorney immediately.
At Tad Nelson & Associates, we have spent decades handling criminal and civil disputes throughout Galveston County, Harris County, Brazoria County, and Chambers County, and we also work with local non–profit organizations when legal issues affect the community.
Galveston reported 12,505 families as of 2020, with 33.2% of households made up of married couples, 25.3% led by a male householder without a spouse, and 34.9% led by a female householder without a spouse. I’m Board Certified in criminal law — a designation held by only a small percentage of Texas attorneys. My partner Amber R. Spurlock runs the firm with me out of League City, off I-45 between Houston and Galveston.
Whether you’re a collector who got burned by a reseller, a store owner facing accusations, or the family of an elderly victim, our Houston and Galveston criminal defense firm handles:
- Texas theft and consignment fraud cases
- Misapplication of fiduciary property charges
- Elder financial–abuse matters in Houston and Galveston
- Collectible, firearms, and high–value property disputes
- Civil recovery under the Texas Theft Liability Act and DTPA
- White–collar defense in Harris and Galveston County courts and other local justice settings, including matters involving reports, investigations, and law–enforcement response
A $200,000 collection may look like a hobby.
To a Texas prosecutor, it can look like a felony case.
Legitimate authorities will not tell you to send cash or money to protect property, and reports from individuals and organizations can help identify the subject of a fraud investigation.
League City office: 281–280–0100
Houston: 281–280–0100
Online: TadLaw.com or reach us through our contact page for Tad Nelson & Associates.
If a Texas merchant tries to walk off with your father’s collection — you don’t need outrage. You need a lawyer with a courthouse parking pass backed by proven client results and testimonials.
Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is created by reading this blog. Facts referenced from the “Bricks & Minifigs” matter are drawn from public reporting and are presented for general illustration only, whether events occurred in Texas, Houston, New York, or elsewhere; none of the parties referenced have been convicted of any crime, and all are presumed innocent. For advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed Texas attorney.
The post The $200,000 LEGO Collection That Could Send Someone to Prison in Galveston, Texas appeared first on The Law Offices of Tad Nelson & Associates.
from The Law Offices of Tad Nelson & Associates https://ift.tt/xnbvwo7
via IFTTT


Comments
Post a Comment