05/31/2026
WHAT A LEGO CONSIGNMENT SCANDAL REVEALS ABOUT COMMUNITY TRUST
Imagine spending two decades building a world-class collection with your aging father, valued at an estimated $200,000, intended to fund your children’s education—only for it to vanish behind the locked doors of a national retail franchise.
This is the reality facing a family in the Pacific Northwest, a situation recently brought to light by YouTuber Reckless Ben. While the internet often thrives on drama, if you strip away the theatrical YouTube editing, you are left with an infuriating story of the failure of corporate accountability and what happens when a brand prioritizes self-preservation over the community that sustains it.
CONTEXT: THE LEGO RESALE MARKET AND BRICKS & MINIFIGS
To understand the weight of this dispute, one must understand the secondary LEGO market. LEGO products are no longer just toys; they are collector items, with rare, retired sets frequently outpacing traditional investments in value.
This booming secondary market fueled the rise of Bricks & Minifigs (BAM), a major North American franchise network specializing in buying, selling, and trading new and used LEGO products. For enthusiasts, a local BAM store is meant to be a safe haven—a neighborhood hub where adults and children alike gather around a shared passion.
Because BAM is a franchise model, individual locations are independently owned and operated, though they operate under a unified corporate banner and trademark.
THE $200,000 DISAPPEARANCE
The unfortunate situation centers on the Salem-Keizer, Oregon, BAM franchise location and the following timeline of events:
- The Consignment: Bryan Mansell and his 83-year-old father legally consigned what is believed to be the largest Star Wars LEGO collection in the world through the Salem-Keizer franchise to fund family education. A formal consignment contract was executed with the store owner at the time.
- The Ouster: The original store owner, Chrystal Gorman, informed the corporate office that she was preparing to sell the business due to a personal relocation. BAM Corporate indicated that they had a potential buyer that would meet her but instead of a discussion or standard transition, corporate representatives arrived, revoked her franchise license, fired her as manager, and seized the location's entire inventory.
- The Transfer of Responsibility: Realizing the immediate legal implications for her consignment clients, the ousted owner informed corporate representatives that roughly half of the store’s current inventory consisted of third-party consigned items. In audio and video recordings captured during the takeover, a corporate support representative explicitly stated that the incoming store ownership would take on all existing consignment liabilities.
- Stonewalling and Tag Removal: When the Mansell family attempted to retrieve their collection, the new store management consistently refused to surrender the goods. Over the next eight months, management's rationale shifted, alternating between claiming the inventory was not the family's property to asserting the items were no longer physically in the building to claiming they never had the inventory. Furthermore, store records and documentation emerged indicating that employees actively stripped identifying consignment tags from the Star Wars sets, blending the family’s private property into standard store inventory.
- Legal Climax and Closure: Under compounding public pressure generated by the documentary, plaintiffs related to the situation successfully advanced their case. Faced with a default judgment and growing liability, the store abruptly locked its doors and ceased operations entirely.
CORPORATE DEFENSIVENESS VS BRAND ACCOUNTABILITY
Regardless of the legal liability loops or fine print buried within franchise disclosures, the corporate handling of this situation highlights a severe failure of leadership. Throughout the documented footage, Ammon McNeff, Chief Operating Officer of BAM North America, consistently projected an attitude of corporate abdication rather than brand accountability.
Instead of stepping in to protect consumers who trusted their internationally trademarked logo, BAM Corporate sought legal loopholes. They publicly claimed that consignment arrangements were technically "prohibited" under their standard franchise agreements, arguing the original contract signed under their brand name was "unauthorized" and therefore not Corporate’s problem—a claim directly disputed by leaked franchisee contracts showing consignment was explicitly permitted.
Furthermore, fact-checks confirm that BAM reportedly offered to return whatever fractured remnants of the collection could be located, but strictly on the condition that the victimized family sign a liability waiver and a public apology.
The starkest look behind the curtain came from a leaked internal corporate memo distributed to other franchisees. The document did not outline a plan to recover the missing goods or compensate an elderly hobbyist. Instead, it focused entirely on a "De-Escalation Playbook," tracking the timeline of "online outrage cycles" and plotting legal tactics to halt the YouTube videos and suppress negative public reviews.
A Contrasting Path: Why True Community Enterprises Matter
This entire saga is a tragic indictment of corporate priorities. A family dealing with compounding medical issues remains missing a massive part of their life's work and financial security. Instead of receiving equity, they were warned that taking legal action would result in them being buried under insurmountable corporate legal bills. BAM Corporate continues to deploy its resources not to make the Mansell family whole, but strictly to defend its trademark from brand erosion. I would not be surprised if many of the BAM franchise holders are similarly outraged by this situation and seek to be positive influences in their local community. Unfortunately, they are now put in a position where they have to defend or remain silent about a brand that engaged in such unethical behavior.
This is exactly why independent, community-first spaces like Brickscape Cafe are necessary. When a business is genuinely rooted in its community, accountability cannot be outsourced to a remote headquarters. Agreements are honored because neighbors look each other in the eye, and the integrity of the local community is valued far above a corporate PR playbook.
It serves as a permanent reminder that while corporations are happy to commodify the concept of "community" to sell products, when a crisis hits, they will almost always prioritize protecting the brand over protecting the customer.