Reckless Ben is finally headed to federal court, and he's agreed to mediate with Bricks & Minifigs. But if you think the ex parte TRO that ordered him to delete his Lego videos is dead, you're reading the tea leaves wrong. Here's the story. In November 2023, Brian Mansell consigned his father Ed's Star Wars Lego collection to a Bricks & Minifigs store in Salem, Oregon. When the operators left the country and corporate repossessed the store, the collection vanished. YouTuber Reckless Ben Schneider investigated and traveled to Utah to confront the people involved. On May 21, 2026, he published "I Tracked Down the Thief Who Stole $200,000 of Lego," branding the chain a thief and accusing police of helping cover it up. Bricks & Minifigs sued, throwing everything at the wall: trespass, stalking, impersonation, harassment, even a civil RICO claim casting Ben as a real-life Tony Soprano. The same day, a Utah judge signed an ex parte restraining order, no bond required, forbidding Ben from posting anything false, misleading, harassing, or defamatory about the company and ordering his videos pulled from every platform. We break down why the order was riddled with First Amendment problems: Paragraph J is a textbook prior restraint, Paragraph K orders videos deleted before any finding they were defamatory, and a 1,000-yard exclusion zone (more than half a mile) wraps every store and employee home in the country. Along the way: Near v. Minnesota, the Pentagon Papers, Keefe, Balboa Island v. Lemon, and Utah's anti-SLAPP law. Then the turn. Once both sides hired real lawyers, they jointly asked the court to swap the TRO for a much narrower injunction: no prior restraints, a 100-yard buffer, and an express carve-out protecting Ben's journalism, criticism, and commentary. The judge rejected the joint motion on a technicality, so the original, broader order is still in force. Days later, Ben removed the case to federal court on diversity jurisdiction. And here's the misconception worth killing: removal does not dissolve the TRO. Under 28 U.S.C. 1450, state-court orders survive removal until a federal judge changes them. But under Rule 65(b) and Granny Goose, the TRO can simply expire, and no federal judge is likely to reinstate anything this broad. We also meet the new magistrate judge, Cecilia Romero. CHAPTERS (00:00) The TRO twist, explained(01:42) Who is who: BAM vs Reckless Ben(02:40) The lawsuit and RICO claim(03:20) What an ex parte TRO is(04:31) Paragraph J: prior restraint(08:20) Paragraph K: taking videos down(10:20) The other TRO provisions(16:01) Why anti-SLAPP laws exist(16:41) The turn: parties renegotiate(18:01) Judge rejects the joint deal(19:01) What mediation really means(21:21) Removal to federal court(23:21) Why the TRO is not dead yet(24:41) New judge, and what is next(26:26) When you need a lawyer Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! https://legaleagle.link/eagleteam LEGAL-ISH DISCLAIMERSorry, occupational hazard: This is not legal advice, nor can I give you legal advice. I AM NOT YOUR LAWYER. Sorry! Everything here is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact your attorney to obtain advice with respect to any particular issue or problem. Nothing here should be construed to form an attorney-client relationship. Also, some of the links in this post may be affiliate links, meaning, at no cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. But if you click, it really helps me make more of these videos! All non-licensed clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).