American Fork Cops' own LEGO Scandal: They Raided Reckless Ben's Airbnb & Arrested Everyone

American Fork police walked five people out of an Airbnb in handcuffs — and admitted, on their own body cam, they couldn't even say who they were. So who can actually sue, and who can win? I'm Brandon Grable, a Texas civil rights attorney. In Part 3 of the Reckless Ben / Bricks & Minifigs breakdown, I use the unredacted body-worn camera to run the real legal test: did police violate the Constitution, and was the right "clearly established" enough to get past qualified immunity? We cover the First Amendment retaliation claim built day by day, the "arguable probable cause" doctrine that lets officers be wrong and still win, the Lego search warrant that turned up no Legos, and why the strongest claim in this whole case may not be Ben's at all. 🔔 Subscribe for civil rights case analysis, qualified immunity coverage, and First Amendment litigation breakdowns. ⚖️ LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This video is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you have a legal issue, please consult with a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction. X: @clearlyestab 🌐 grable.law 📧 Got footage or a story? [email protected] Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:46 What Changed Now 02:51 Retaliation Law Basics 04:01 Four Days of Escalation 07:08 Arrest to Send Message 10:53 Raid and Mass Cuffs 13:30 Qualified Immunity Reality 15:00 Lego Warrant Backstory 19:18 Fourth Amendment Update 22:11 Speech and Recording 25:14 Who Can Actually Win 29:02 City Liability Next #RecklessBen #BricksAndMinifigs #QualifiedImmunity #StarWarsLego #Bodycam #CivilRights #FourthAmendment #FirstAmendment #PoliceAccountability #KnowYourRights