Motion Filed to Vacate Speech Restrictions on Reckless Ben
CereBel Legal Intelligence Founder Moves to Intervene in LEGO Retailer Case to Protect Public Access to Gagged YouTube Documentary
Motion seeks removal or narrowing of court-ordered speech ban affecting popular YouTube creator Reckless Ben
NEW YORK, JUNE 12, 2026. AI-startup CereBel Legal Intelligence today announced that its founder filed a motion seeking limited intervention in the wild legal controversy brewing between LEGO reseller Bricks & Minifigs and guerilla journalist Reckless Ben Schneider which has been sensationalized on YouTube and other social media platforms.
Ben Schneider, publishing as "Reckless Ben", appeared poised to release the third installment of a popular three part video series documenting his team's raucous efforts to recover a prized Star Wars LEGO collection— efforts that reseller alleges involved unlawful conduct-- when a Temporary Restraining Order was suddenly served on him by email. As Schneider explains in a "farewell"' video that has already been viewed over four million times, the Order issued by Judge Graf of Utah's Fourth District Court left him feeling that he could face imprisonment if he so much as mentioned the name of the company that had brought the allegations against him.
The motion to vacate the gag order does not take a position on whether the allegations made by any party are true. Instead, it points to longstanding Supreme Court precedent recognizing that freedom of speech protects the public's right to receive information as well as a speaker's right to share it. The motion further highlights that prior restraints on publication are among the most disfavored forms of judicial intervention, particularly when it chills public debate.
A copy of the motion can be viewed below.
A Controversy That Captured Millions of Viewers
What began as a dispute involving what has been hailed as the World’s Largest Star Wars LEGO Collection has evolved into one of the most widely discussed controversies in the online creator economy. Schneider's investigation videos have attracted tens of millions of views and the broader story is generating extensive discussion across LEGO fan communities, legal commentary channels, technology publications, and mainstream news outlets. Independent commentators, attorneys, journalists, and content creators have produced countless hours of analysis and reaction content examining the underlying allegations as well as the commercial, criminal, civil rights, and police conduct legal battles that have followed.
It has become a broader public conversation about the limits of activist journalism typified by a new breed of young online creators like Mr. Schneider, the role of law enforcement in private disputes, the proper boundaries of online speech, platform moderation, consumer rights, franchise accountability, and the legal risks faced by independent creators and targets of their ire in an environment in which an individual consumer grievance can be magnified a million fold by a popular independent creator.
Why Intervene?
Want to hear what happens next.
“Like millions of other online consumers interested in legal issues, business ethics, and public policy, I've been captivated by the controversy and eager to see how the story unfolds. I was disappointed to see Ben prevented from releasing the final installment of his investigation while the franchise company remains free to continue advancing its version of events in public,” CereBel founder Gregory Belmont said.
"The public has an independent interest in hearing from all sides of an ongoing controversy. If the company has been falsely accused or unfairly portrayed, the public deserves to hear that side as well. Open discussion is how contested facts are tested. The answer to disputed speech is more speech, more evidence, and more transparency—not less. Courts exist to resolve disputes, not to decide which side of a public debate gets to continue speaking while the other side is silenced."
Concerns About the Message Sent to Young Creators
Belmont said he became increasingly concerned about the broader civic implications of the case as the Court’s misapplied temporary restraint power impacted free speech of a traditionally less powerful party.
"I am concerned that young people may see speech being removed from public view and conclude that their own voices do not matter. If they come to believe that participation in public debate is reserved for the powerful, many may lose faith in the value of speaking up, engaging in civic life, or challenging institutions when they believe something is wrong."
"Millions of young people participate in public discussions today through YouTube, podcasts, blogs, social media, and independent journalism," Belmont said. "When they see a creator's work removed or restrained from public view by court order, especially before any criminal guilt or civil liability has been determined, some may conclude that ordinary people do not really have a voice."
"While all should understand the serious harm that can be caused by defamation and unlawful stunts, I worry that young people may come away believing that speaking up is futile, that challenging powerful institutions is pointless, or that public participation belongs only to those with money, lawyers, and influence. That is exactly the opposite lesson we should be teaching."
The Promise of Artificial Intelligence to Improve Access to Justice for All
Belmont also cited access-to-justice concerns and a demonstration of the use of AI tools as a motivation behind the filing.
"Artificial intelligence has the potential to place legal understanding within reach of ordinary people on a scale never before possible," Belmont said. "Not by replacing lawyers, judges, or courts, but by helping citizens understand their rights, responsibilities, risks, and options before problems become crises."
Belmont said AI can help people identify legal issues earlier, avoid costly mistakes, organize facts and documents, evaluate settlement opportunities, communicate more effectively with counsel, and participate more meaningfully in legal proceedings whether represented by attorneys or not.
"The future of access to justice is not merely about helping people represent themselves," Belmont said. "It is about helping people make better decisions, avoid unnecessary disputes, pursue fair resolutions, and navigate legal institutions with confidence rather than fear."
Belmont believes these technologies can help narrow the longstanding gap between possessing legal rights and being able to exercise them effectively.
"The creator economy and AI-assisted analysis are allowing ordinary individuals to investigate, publish, and contribute knowledge in ways that once required large institutions," Belmont said. "That is a positive development for both free expression and civic participation. But the moment must be met by the improvement of tools designed to ensure the law is correctly understood, not misinterpreted or misapplied."
"My concern is larger than this case," Belmont said. "The question is whether citizens will continue to believe they can participate meaningfully in public life, advocate for themselves, defend themselves when accused, and seek fair outcomes under the law. I believe technology can help make that vision real, but only if we remain committed to openness, participation, and equal access to justice."
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