I Help YouTuber Arrested Over Lego Videos (Part 1)
Credibility score: 49/100 — Mixed Credibility. Analyzed 39 claims. Found 1 low-credibility claim(s). 1 claim(s) rated as highly credible.
Claims analyzed
Claims American Fork PD committed illegal stops, searches, seizures, false arrests to protect Lego company — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Serious accusations — ongoing legal situation makes verification tricky
Got 10,000 emails in two days after call to action — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Personal inbox claim — zero way to verify the number
Claims this is the world's biggest Star Wars Lego collection — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
No independent verification of 'world's biggest' title anywhere.
Store is inventing contract violations to seize Lego inventory — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Speculation dressed as fact — no contract shown.
Store now claims the Star Wars Lego sets as their own inventory — Mixed Credibility (60/100)
Straight from Brian's account — unverified by outside sources.
Store threatens to make litigation cost more than the Lego collection — Mixed Credibility (65/100)
Classic "sue and we'll bankrupt you" threat — common corporate move.
Ben claims he gets sued on every series but always wins or escapes — Mixed Credibility (55/100)
"Magically" winning lawsuits sounds convenient.
Store employee immediately kicks Ben out when he asks about the Lego sets — Mixed Credibility (70/100)
Plausible store reaction — still just his word.
Claims the store has $200k of their Lego inventory — Mixed Credibility (55/100)
Matches the $200k Lego Star Wars heist narrative in coverage.
Says 95% of his police interactions go super well — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Personal experience claim — no way to verify the percentage.
Incident happened in Keizer, Oregon — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Name spelled wrong twice — it's Keizer not Kaiser.
Police were protecting a local business from out-of-state person — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Speculation about police motives, not a verifiable fact.
Running a lottery then having store keep prize turns it into criminal theft — Mixed Credibility (25/100)
Legal theory that feels like a loophole hack — Oregon lottery theft law doesn't work that way.
Police read Oregon law book and agreed the situation was criminal — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Classic he-said-they-said with zero independent confirmation
Officer was investigating and planned to take the company down — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Sudden 180° from helpful to trespassing with zero explanation
They were permanently trespassed while trying to claim their prize — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Sounds like a property dispute that escalated fast
Regular court lawsuit would take 3-4 years — Mixed Credibility (60/100)
Estimate, not a hard timeline — courts vary wildly
Lawsuit would cost $200-300k for less than $200k return — Mixed Credibility (55/100)
Cost-benefit math on a hypothetical case — no actual quotes shown
Plan to file 10 small claims suits for $10k each to bypass long civil case — Mixed Credibility (40/100)
Small claims limit is real — the "10 separate suits" workaround is legally shaky 💀
Says Bricks and Minifigs closed their Oregon store right after the group filed for default judgment — Mixed Credibility (40/100)
Timing claim about store closure being triggered by lawsuit filing — no independent confirmation in available sources.
Lawsuits rejected for skipping pre-filing mediation — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Standard court requirement — nothing wild here.
Cops showed up right after they visited Lego corporate nearby — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Just his version of events so far
Calls the traffic stop illegal — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Legal conclusion, not a fact check.
Showing video to Mormons will make Josh listen and fix things — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Pure speculation dressed up as strategy 🙄
Alleges police illegally redacted bodycam to hide lack of drugs — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Strong accusation — zero proof offered in this clip 🙄
Prosecutor refused to disclose arrest reason to avoid YouTube clicks — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Classic "protecting victims" line — sounds more like protecting the narrative.
Guy they're serving papers stole old man's life savings via Lego collection — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Core accusation with zero receipts in this clip — just vibes so far 🙄
Marian County court papers don't need judge's name until after service — Mixed Credibility (45/100)
Claims specific county procedure without showing proof — could be real, could be convenient.
Claims owner falsely accused them of having heroin — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Personal account of alleged false report — no independent verification yet
Serving papers can't be stalking because reasonable person wouldn't fear it — Mixed Credibility (50/100)
Legal opinion dressed as fact — courts decide what's reasonable, not the defendant 💼
See the full analysis with sources and timestamps →