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The BAM Map Β· investigative thread

The legal case, graded

What a court has already decided, what the documents prove, what's still alleged, the racketeering framework walked element by element, and the way in.

11 sections39 min readThread 7 of 8
In this thread (11)
  1. The way in
  2. The legal arguments, in full — element by element, fact by fact
  3. What a court has already decided
  4. What the documents prove on their face
  5. What is still only alleged
  6. The pattern the law has a name for
  7. The damages paradox
  8. The timeline of intent
  9. The walls
  10. The way in (continued)
  11. The litigation map
Chapter Six

#The way in

After the entities, the liens, and the lawsuits, what is actually proven, what is sealed behind unfiled paper, and which regulators already hold enough to act.

Strip away the noise and a story like this comes down to three columns: what a court has already decided, what the primary documents prove on their face, and what remains an allegation someone still has to win. This article keeps those columns separate. So here, at the end, is the ledger.

The reckoning

Every legal element below is tied to the fact that establishes it, and every fact opens its source. Authorities are inline and linked to the free public copy; records are inline and open the held document. The honest headline: this is not a proven fraud case, and calling it one would be the overreach that sinks the rest. What is settled is an unlicensed-law operator; what is documented is a repeatable creditor-frustration playbook the family ran on its own collapsing franchise, and a habit of ending every dispute before it reaches a tested record. The most powerful move is not an accusation at all — it is Utah’s anti-SLAPP law.

The lawsuit is the last move in the pattern, not the first. Legally Mine sold asset-protection structures built to make collection difficult; the Ohio Supreme Court entered a consent decree enjoining Legally Mine and Daniel McNeff from the unauthorized practice of law. Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine Public records then show the family using the same kind of entity, brand and collateral moves around its own franchise: alleged default, store seizure, insider resale, a built-but-unexecuted IP-holding vehicle Certificate of Organization BAM IP Holdings LLC, Reg. No. 5227635, and the old Legally Mine entity renamed into OLDCO while the assumed name reappeared under Centra. When the critic documented those connections, BAM answered with a racketeering suit Verified Compl., BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353, a gag order BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353, and, after a traffic stop, a stalking warrant that seized nothing American-Fork-Police-Warrant-3352981-Search-Warrant. Each beat below ties a legal element to the record fact that proves it.

The critic’s defense — strongest first

Can he end the whole suit, and make them pay? Provable now Defense

Utah has an anti-SLAPP law written for exactly this situation — a lawsuit filed to punish someone for speaking on a matter of public concern. It does not merely defend the racketeering claims one by one; it can end the entire suit at once and shift the cost of the fight onto Bricks & Minifigs. The window has not run.

The vehicle → the statute. Utah’s Public Expression Protection Act lets a speech defendant file a special motion that freezes discovery on filing, forces the plaintiff to come forward with admissible proof on every element, dismisses the suit with prejudice if it cannot, and shifts the speaker’s fees and costs to the plaintiff. Utah Code 78B-25-101 et seq. (UPEPA), UT ST 78B-25-101, -107βœ“ Mackey v. Krause, 2025 UT 37, 575 P.3d 1162βœ“
Element: a probability of prevailing → the fact that defeats it. On the special motion BAM must put competent evidence on each essential element, not allegations. Mackey v. Krause, 2025 UT 37, 575 P.3d 1162βœ“ Yet its verified complaint swears the same $300,000 extortion demand two irreconcilable ways — a 2/5/26 call by one pair of speakers at ¶90 and an “early 2025” communication by another at ¶172 — and neither version names the critic. Verified Compl., BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353 Sworn contradictions on a core predicate bind as judicial admissions; lose that episode and the racketeering count cannot reach its three-episode pattern, and a claim that fails the threshold is dismissed with prejudice.
Why it is especially dangerous to BAM → the serial-resolution habit. This enterprise ends its disputes without a tested record: the Ohio UPL case closed on consent with an express hearing waiver Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine; the family’s own federal suit was voluntarily dismissed Mcneff V Mcneff Utd 2-21-cv-00048 doc12 Voluntary Dismissal 2021-02-10; the cash-advance actions ended in withdrawal and settlement rather than judgment Dib Capital v. Legally Mine; the consumer case went to private arbitration. A special motion forces the one thing that pattern is built to avoid — proof on the record, or loss with prejudice.
Element: fault → limited-purpose-public-figure / actual malice. The merits screen reaches the defamation theory, so a plaintiff that thrust itself into a public controversy must prove actual malice by clear and convincing evidence. Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 345 (1974)βœ“ Courts have put exactly this kind of plaintiff in that box. Resolute Forest Prods. v. Greenpeace Int’l, 302 F. Supp. 3d 1005, 1019 (N.D. Cal. 2017)βœ“ New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 279 (1964)βœ“
The gate: public concern, wide open. A 400-store franchisor’s treatment of franchisees and consumers is squarely a matter of public concern, defeating BAM’s “private commercial grudge” answer. Snyder v. Phelps, 562 U.S. 443, 451 (2011)βœ“
The threats do not save the suit. BAM’s Exhibit K collects anonymous, serious threats — but they are overwhelmingly pseudonymous, the work of a million-view video’s audience, and a speaker is not liable for the independent criminal acts of listeners absent incitement. NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 U.S. 886, 927-29 (1982)βœ“ The complaint and the gag reach his published journalism, not the threats; the lawful answer to a true threat is a criminal referral, not a prior restraint. Verified Compl., BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353
The timing is live, not forfeited. The special-motion clock is keyed to the response date and the court retains good-cause discretion — which an out-of-state, self-represented, email-served defendant has in abundance. Utah Code 78B-25-103, UT ST 78B-25-103, (1)βœ“
The move (for his counsel to weigh). File the special motion and press the prior-restraint challenge to the gag in parallel; keep it in state court, because the Tenth Circuit has held a state anti-SLAPP special motion may not carry into federal court. Los Lobos Renewable Power, LLC v. Americulture, Inc., 885 F.3d 659, 670 (10th Cir. 2018)βœ“

The affirmative case — what the record supports against the enterprise

Conduct-anchored theories a plaintiff (the Gormans, the consignor, a former Legally Mine client, or a regulator) could bring. All are fact-dependent; none asserts proven fraud, and the claim is not that the McNeffs are racketeers — it is that they built and ran the structure the law was written to examine.

Moving the assets out of reach — the fraudulent-transfer badge engine Provable now (APEX) Offense

Utah’s voidable-transactions statute lets a factfinder infer actual intent to hinder creditors from a confluence of “badges of fraud” — the badge cluster is the proof, not a single smoking-gun document. Utah Code 25-6-202, UT ST 25-6-202, (1)(a),(2)βœ“ On the hardened record, roughly seven of the eleven badges are confirmed record facts at the APEX (Daniel McNeff / Legally Mine); that is a civil prima-facie case the McNeffs must come forward to rebut — not an adjudication, and not a criminal charge. Each badge below is tied to the fact that establishes it.

CONFIRMED fact (a) transfer to an insider. The 2021-02-12 UCC pledges 21% of Legally Mine plus operating assets to sons Ammon and Matthew McNeff securing a $1,728,000 note. The figure is documented in four court pleadings with a dated 1/26/2021 promissory note, so the honest characterization is insider-preference + retained control + an adverse inference on the unproduced four-corners instrument — not collusion.
CONFIRMED event (b) debtor retained control. Legally Mine renamed to “LM OLDCO” the same minute as its tax arm (5/21/2026 4:49 PM) while Centra Wealth registered the “Legally Mine” assumed names days later — same brand, same control, new shell. Retained dominion is inferred, not a proven strip.
CONFIRMED (recorder) (d) before/after being sued. The Utah County recorder shows two coordinated, consecutive-entry, same-day batch transfers: 2021-01-12 (entries 5830–5833) four asset-protection LLCs quitclaim their houses to Evelyn McNeff, ~10 days before the sons’ federal suit; and 2023-02-26 (entries 11822–11824) Evelyn deeds three out to new Tolkien-named shells. Consecutive entry numbers = a single coordinated recording.
CONFIRMED (i) insolvent / soon after. Two separate confirmed facts, never merged: BAM Franchising’s FY2022 balance-sheet insolvency deepening to FY2025 with a going-concern recital FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026; and the IRS distress signal — $891,502.75 across 8 federal tax liens (FY2016–2019, all released), an encumbrance, not a loss.
CONFIRMED (registry) + Rivendell trust-apex and a charging-order clause run on themselves. The family’s home-holding AP-LLC, Rivendell Estates LLC, is owned by the Daniel J. and Evelyn F. McNeff Living Trust (registry-verified), and the family’s own 2016 Certificate of Organization bakes in the exact non-pro-rata GP-control / charging-order-defeating mechanic the Legally Mine handout sells — strong knowledge/design scienter. These are CONFIRMED structure facts; fraudulent intent stays an inference, held beside the innocent estate-planning reading.
CONFIRMED (j) shortly before/after substantial debt. The cleanest survivor — the $1,728,000 note plus the acquisition notes and the merchant-cash stack, each contemporaneous with the debt.
The discipline What this does NOT reach. The badge mechanism is “permits the inference + shifts production,” not a formal burden-shift of persuasion. It targets a debtor’s below-value insider conveyance — not BAM’s Article-9 repossession or the merchant-cash liens, which the §25-6-304 new-value / foreclosure safe harbors immunize. Utah Code 25-6-304, UT ST 25-6-304, (1),(5)(b)βœ“ Fraudulent transfer is not a racketeering predicate, so it creates $0 racketeering dollars; the controlling adverse REV case must be distinguished on its arm’s-length facts. White v. Wardley (In re White), 144 F.4th 1216 (10th Cir. 2025)βœ“ Reaching the franchise defendants needs an unsettled reverse/horizontal veil-pierce; intent stays an inference, held beside the innocent estate-planning reading.

Do the separate-looking matters form one pattern? — relatedness Offense

SUPPORTABLE A research pass on the racketeering relatedness prong found support for treating the consumer arbitrations, the UPL case, the father-sons war, the merchant-cash suits, the property rotation and the renames as one related pattern — relatedness turns on the defendant’s regular way of doing business, and engineered separateness is itself evidence OF relatedness. H.J. Inc. v. Nw. Bell Tel. Co., 492 U.S. 229 (1989)βŒ– United States v. Galati, 853 F. Supp. 152 (E.D. Pa. 1994)βŒ– Cardenas v. Toyota Motor Corp., 418 F. Supp. 3d 1090 (S.D. Fla. 2019)βŒ– Predicate criminal acts are NOT established.

Is there one enterprise? — the cross-arena personnel bridge Offense

CONFIRMED (FDD-sworn) The associated-in-fact enterprise does not rest on inference. BAM’s own 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document, in its Franchise Seller Disclosure Form, swears that Joshua Johnson — the insider BAM installed as the Salem store’s new owner — simultaneously serves as BAM’s Franchise Development Recruiter, as Executive Vice President of Fortune Law, and as Legally Mine’s Executive Event Booking Director: one man holding office in the franchise, in a law firm, and in the asset-protection apex at the same time. It is a documented personnel link binding the three arms, sworn in BAM’s own regulated filing — the cleanest single piece of evidence that the separate-looking entities operate as one group. It remains enterprise evidence, not a predicate act: it helps establish the enterprise the racketeering statute is written to examine, but it does not show that any arm committed a crime, and the predicate acts stay unestablished.

The remaining affirmative theories — the unlicensed-law machine (Ohio, adjudicated), the manufactured default, the collection that vanished, seized-then-sold-to-insiders, and the disclosure that wasn’t true — are walked in the three columns below and in BAM’s own words, fact-checked. On the consignment conversion, keep BAM’s physical repossession (correctly BAM’s) separate from the franchise-level accounting/remittance shortfall, which runs principally to Chrystal Law / the Salem-Keizer franchise; the documented loss is modest (~$10–20K net), never the “$200,000” of the complaint, and “$17,559” is a BAM sales-tracking figure, never a paid-to-Mansell number. On Comer/iMall, the FTC scope qualifier travels: the lifetime ban was on Internet/pay-per-call business opportunities, and the franchise-sales bar was ten years and expired around 2009. FTC v. iMall, Inc., No. 2:99-CV-03650 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 12, 1999)βœ“

Read this as analysis, not accusation. The enterprise and continuity elements are documented; the predicate criminal acts are NOT established and are marked as such; fraudulent intent is an inference, held beside the innocent reading; the documented damages are modest and itemized (Mansell conversion ~$10–20K net, principally a Chrystal-Law/Salem-franchise accounting question, never the “$200,000” of the complaint), never a summed racketeering total. The civil posture is prima-facie at the apex; the criminal posture is a referral with named evidence gaps. The claim is not that the McNeffs are racketeers — it is that they built and ran the structure the law was written to examine, and the examination has not been done. Every defendant is presumed innocent.

#What a court has already decided

One thing is adjudicated. On February 20, 2025, the Ohio Supreme Court entered a final order enjoining Legally Mine and Daniel J. McNeff and imposing a civil penalty. Final Order, Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine Ohio State Bar Assn. v. Legally Mine, L.L.C., 2025-Ohio-539, 177 Ohio St.3d 1441, 252 N.E.3d 155 (table)βœ“ The Ohio State Bar Association had brought the matter as unauthorized practice of law, the claim that a company selling asset-protection β€œblueprints” and entity paperwork to dentists and doctors was, in substance, practicing law without a license. Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine The board’s record traces the funnel precisely: an Ohio dentist who sat through a Legally Mine presentation at a Canton dental convention and enrolled in a program promising legal-document work. Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine

That order is real, and it is a finding. But it should be read for exactly what it is. The Ohio docket shows the disposition was a consent decree, entered on a board report with the respondents’ express waiver of notice and hearing. Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine A consent decree is generally not β€œactually litigated,” so it carries no automatic preclusive weight in another state, and its reach is limited to Ohio conduct. Ohio State Bar Assn. v. Legally Mine, L.L.C., 2025-Ohio-539βœ“ The decree’s recital that the conduct β€œconstitutes” unauthorized practice is an admission usable as evidence, not a nationwide judgment. The pattern Ohio addressed is the strongest single fact in this whole file; it is also the narrowest.

#What the documents prove on their face

A second tier needs no trial, because the proof is the paper itself.

The franchise disclosure document contradicts itself. BAM’s 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document states in Item 1 that β€œWe have no parents or predecessors that are required to be disclosed,” while Item 2, in the bio of chief financial officer Reed Brimhall, states that he β€œhas been the Chief Financial Officer of the Franchisor and the Franchisor’s Parent since June 2016.” FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026 The same document says BAM is a Delaware corporation formed October 11, 2023, that completed a Delaware survivor merger on April 18, 2024, a clean origin story for an entity whose Bricks & Minifigs system has been registered and operating since 2011. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026 BAM Franchising, Reg. No. 76881896 Delaware Certificate of Merger - BAM Franchising (Oregon) into Delaware - File 2482543, Reg. No. 2482543 These are the franchisor’s own sworn disclosures, filed with state franchise regulators. A reader does not need discovery to see that an Item 1 promising no parent cannot live in the same booklet as an Item 2 describing a parent the CFO has run since 2016. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026

The strongest disclosure contradiction is an absence. BAM’s own complaint says it repossessed the Salem store in November 2024, and that the store passed in March 2025 to Baker, a company owned by BAM’s own repossession inspector and a BAM recruiter. Yet the same year’s FDD reports zero Oregon outlets reacquired by the franchisor in 2024 and zero sold to franchisees in 2025, and it skips the very financial-statement note that should have explained a Salem sale. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026 Verified Compl., BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353 The transaction at the center of this story is the one the regulatory filing leaves out, and a sale to a company a BAM employee co-owns is precisely the related-party deal a disclosure document is meant to spell out. BAM calls the sale arm’s-length, and it may have been, but the two are not opposites: a fair-terms deal between a company and its own employee is still a related-party transaction, and the audited financials a franchise filing requires must set those out, with their terms, in the footnotes. None appears, for Salem or for the Eugene store also sold to Baker, a gap a franchise examiner can act on by requiring corrected financials and holding the registration until they are filed. Eugene Baker Bricks INC OR

The insider resale is on the record. The bankruptcy schedules of franchisee Jace & Ace listed BAM Franchising as the franchise counterparty, and the disclosure statement records BAM agreeing to assume the franchise agreement with a twelve-month extension. Jace & Ace (bankruptcy) 20-40193 doc23 Schedules Original Jace Ace LLC Jace & Ace (bankruptcy) 20-40193 doc29 Disclosure Statement for Small Business When a franchise location failed, the chain ran from the independent franchisee to a company-owned store and onward to new buyers, a structure the legal file ties to a March 27, 2025 asset-purchase agreement moving the Salem store to Baker-affiliated buyers. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document Bricks & Minifigs 2023 FDD That a franchisor took over, then resold, a distressed location is not an accusation; it is a transaction visible in the filings.

The family built a separate box for the intellectual property. BAM IP Holdings LLC is its own Utah entity, managed by Ammon McNeff and Matthew McNeff, at its own Provo address, named for the one asset it exists to hold. Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM IP Holdings Business 14333873 Detail Certificate of Organization BAM IP Holdings LLC, Reg. No. 5227635 Meanwhile the operating company, BAM Franchising, pledged its assets to JPMorgan Chase Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM Franchising Detail Secondary Copy and watched Legally Mine pledge 450,000 of its shares to outside lenders. Utah UCC - Detail The marks the franchise is built on still name BAM Franchising as their owner, not the holding company, so the box meant to keep them one entity beyond a creditor’s or a franchisee’s reach is built and waiting, the transfer itself not yet on the public record. USPTO TSDR, BAM (SN 98706031) Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM IP Holdings Business 14333873 Name History

And the name itself has been re-homed. β€œLegally Mine” as a live brand is now an assumed name owned by Centra Wealth Solutions LLC, with BTJD Corporate Services as its registered agent, a fresh wrapper around an old product. Filing History Centra Wealth Solutions LLC, Reg. No. 14421835 Centra’s managers of record are Mark Comer and David Johnston. Filing History Centra Wealth Solutions LLC, Reg. No. 14421835 On Comer specifically the identification is strongly corroborated, resting on several independent identifiers beyond the shared name (set out in β€œThe walls,” below), short only of the single document that would make it certain; this article does not state it as confirmed.

#What is still only alleged

The third column is the one that disciplines everything above it.

No court has found that the people who bought these asset-protection plans were defrauded into measurable losses. The closest adjudicated event runs the other way: in a Washington bankruptcy, a Chapter 11 debtor’s $7,800 payment to Legally Mine was avoided and a judgment entered against the company in 2019, then fully satisfied months later. Compl., Peterson v. Legally Mine Peterson v. Legally Mine Peterson v. Legally Mine That is a single avoided transfer, paid off, not a finding of a fraud scheme. The fraud-in-the-inducement theory against the franchise disclosures, that franchisees relied on an β€œauthorized LEGO reseller” pitch and the contradictory FDD and lost money, remains a theory; there is no private right of action under the FTC Franchise Rule, and the state-law fraud and rescission claims would have to be pleaded and proven, with a real risk that an arbitration clause sends them to an arbitrator before a court ever reaches them. Coraud LLC v. Kidville Franchise Co., 109 F. Supp. 3d 615 (S.D.N.Y. 2015)βœ“

The fraudulent-transfer chain is alleged, not established. Utah’s voidable-transactions statute could reach an insider transfer made by an insolvent debtor for less than reasonably equivalent value, but the controlling Tenth Circuit authority makes β€œreasonably equivalent value” a genuine, fact-bound fight, and the cleanest pleaded transfer points at Daniel McNeff and Legally Mine, not at the franchise buyers. Utah Code Ann. Β§ 25-6-203, UT ST Β§ 25-6-203, (1)(a),(2)βœ“ White v. Wardley (In re White), 144 F.4th 1216 (10th Cir. 2025)βœ“ Veil-piercing to β€œthe family and its entities” is an unsettled horizontal extension of a doctrine Utah courts apply with great caution and reserve as a last resort. Jones & Trevor Mktg., Inc. v. Lowry, 2012 UT 39, 284 P.3d 630βœ“ M.J. v. Wisan, 2016 UT 13, 371 P.3d 21βœ“

And the criminal charges are unadjudicated. Benjamin Schneider, the critic behind the videos, faces criminal process in Utah, but a charge is not a conviction, and the presumption of innocence is absolute. Reckless-Ben-Utah-Case-261000376-Information-and-Indictment, No. 261000376 The civil RICO-style complaint BAM filed against him pleads extortion and fraud predicates that are contested in both amount and actor: the headline β€œ$200,000 stolen” figure traces to a 2023 store promotional valuation, the genuinely unexplained accounting gap is alleged at closer to $10,000, $20,000, and BAM’s own verified complaint concedes that no court or law-enforcement body has found that BAM stole or converted anything. These are allegations on both sides of a private dispute, sworn but undecided.

#The pattern the law has a name for

There is a word for a business run as an ongoing scheme through a pattern of crimes, and it is worth being precise about it, because precision is what separates a documented argument from a libel. Federal racketeering law, and Utah’s own Pattern of Unlawful Activity Act, do not punish looking guilty. They require four things, and each must be proven: an enterprise; a pattern of predicate acts that are themselves specific, enumerated crimes; continuity and relationship among those acts; and the conduct of the enterprise’s affairs through them. Lay the record against those elements, in the open, and the honest accounting looks like this.

The enterprise is the easiest to see. Utah’s filings show six commonly controlled entities, Legally Mine, Legal Bear, Legally Mine Tax and Accounting, Procure, Shield, and Team Dentistry, pledged together under a single blanket lien, with Daniel McNeff as the lone signatory, all at one Orem address. Utah UCC - Detail The same apparatus, the captive registered agent, the fixed cast of Daniel and Evelyn, the habit of naming each vessel after a fantasy realm, runs through the family’s real estate as readily as its receivables, across roughly seventeen years. That is what the law means by an association-in-fact enterprise: a structure with a purpose, relationships among its parts, and the longevity to pursue the purpose. On the record, it is documented.

The relationship and the continuity are documented too. The method does not vary: an asset is placed in a charging-order LLC, moved to the non-debtor spouse, and moved on again, each step timed to the calendar of a threat. The two consecutive-entry batch transfers, four houses to Evelyn in January 2021 about ten days before the sons sued their father, three deeded back out to fresh shells in 2023, Utah County Recorder β€” 2021-01-12 batch transfers to Evelyn McNeff (entries 5830-5833) Utah County Recorder β€” 2023-02-26 batch transfers from Evelyn McNeff (entries 11822-11824) and the corporate husk-shed of 2026 Filing History LM OLDCO LLC, Reg. No. 7228976 are the same maneuver, repeated over years. That is a course of conduct, and it runs independent of any single lawsuit.

The predicate acts are where the honest accounting stops short, and this is the part most worth stating plainly. A fraudulent transfer, moving a house beyond a creditor’s reach, is a civil wrong. It is not, by itself, a racketeering crime. For any of these moves to become a predicate act, a prosecutor would have to show it was carried out through an enumerated offense: a misrepresentation to a federally insured lender, say, or the laundering of money that was itself unlawful. The documents in this file do not establish that. They establish the structure and the timing; they do not establish a predicate crime, because the records that would, the loan files, the bank accounts, the wire instructions, sit behind subpoenas no journalist or private party can issue.

So here is the line, and this article will not cross it. What the documents prove is a structure carrying the hallmarks the law associates with a racketeering enterprise, and a prima-facie civil case that the family’s transfers were made with actual intent to hinder creditors, the badges of fraud Utah’s code enumerates, most of them present on the face of the record. What the documents do not prove is that a crime was committed. Whether this pattern is racketeering or merely the aggressive-but-lawful asset protection its architect sells turns on the one thing no one outside a grand jury has yet seen: where the money went. Daniel McNeff is presumed innocent of every crime unless a court says otherwise, and no court has. The claim here is not that the McNeffs are racketeers. It is narrower, and on this record sturdier: they built, and ran on their own household, the exact machine that the racketeering and fraudulent-transfer laws were written to examine, and the examination has not yet been done.

And on this record, that is less an accident than a pattern. Every creditor who has pressed, the lender plaintiffs, the merchant-cash funders, even the sons in their own federal suit, has watched the matter end before a court reached the merits: settled, withdrawn, dismissed with prejudice, discontinued. Compl., Swiss Fund v. Legally Mine No judge in any of them weighed whether a transfer was fraudulent, because none of the cases lasted long enough to ask. That outcome is not incidental to the product; it is the product. Its architect’s own pitch is that a properly built entity makes a judgment creditor’s victory β€œworthless,” and a victory not worth winning is a case few creditors carry to the end. The documents do not show a man a court has cleared. They show a man a court has not yet weighed, inside a structure built and marketed to keep the weighing from ever being worth a creditor’s while. The losses that are documented in this file stay what the record makes them, modest, itemized, and state-law; nothing here is a summed racketeering total, and none of it is offered as one.

#The damages paradox

The same machine built to make these entities judgment-proof as defendants — the negative equity, the charging-order shells, the “own nothing” structure — is the machine that disarms BAM as a plaintiff. Its suit against the critic asks a jury to treat the brand as a valuable thing a YouTuber destroyed. But you cannot be, at once, the asset-less company a creditor can’t reach and the valuable brand a critic ruined.

Defamation requires a provably false statement that caused a quantified loss. Truth is an absolute defense — that BAM did not pay Bryan Mansell, if true, is not actionable. Harm from the public reacting to true facts is a boycott on the truth, not the critic’s legal liability. A critic’s opinions are protected. What is left to recover is a thin slice: loss traceable to a specific false statement, proven with reasonable certainty — and for a corporation claiming reputational injury, that ordinarily means special, pecuniary damages — specific, actual, and non-speculative — not presumed ones. Computerized Thermal Imaging, Inc. v. Bloomberg, L.P., 312 F.3d 1292, (10th Cir. 2002)βŒ–

Then the company’s own paper closes the slice. BAM’s Franchise Disclosure Document — a regulated filing made under penalty for misstatement — reports negative stockholders’ equity deepening across the years (its own figures run from a deficit of $181,935 to one of $621,091), carries a going-concern “substantial doubt” qualification every year, and books more than $1.2 million in liabilities, including deferred revenue — unearned fees BAM still owes service on, a liability that deepens the hole rather than filling it. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026 A company cannot certify distress and a going-concern doubt for years and then tell a jury a critic destroyed a fortune; its damages are capped by its own disclosures. Book equity is not enterprise value, and a franchise’s worth can live in royalty streams a balance sheet doesn’t show — but that is an argument BAM must make against its own sworn filings, by estoppel, uphill.

And the strategy is admitted at the top. Daniel McNeff’s own Legally Mine webinar teaches it out loud: make the company look poor so people are less likely to sue. The plaintiff’s founder, on tape, instructs clients to make a company look worthless to deter litigation; the plaintiff then did exactly that across two decades of filings, and cannot now claim the value it spent twenty years disclaiming. That is the inversion entire: the architecture engineered to defeat their creditors is the architecture that defeats their damages. Under Utah’s Uniform Public Expression Protection Act, where a plaintiff must show a probability of prevailing on every element — damages included — before a public-concern case may proceed, an unprovable and self-capped damages element is exactly where the case ends early. Mackey v. Krause, 2025 UT 37, 575 P.3d 1162βŒ–

#The timeline of intent

The damages paradox shows the structure cutting against BAM as a plaintiff. Read forward, the same structure builds an affirmative case against the McNeff entities as debtors — and it turns on the hardest thing to prove: intent. A twenty-five-year asset-protection professional, running on his own family enterprise the exact creditor-defeating play he sells nationally, does not stumble into a fractal of perfectly walled-off shells by accident. Each piece survives isolated scrutiny because surviving isolated scrutiny is the product he markets. So the case does not hinge on one smoking-gun transfer; it hinges on design — the same defensive move, executed at the brand, franchise, and registered-agent layers, after a creditor had already arrived. The polish is not the alibi. It is the scienter.

Lay every datable asset move and every creditor or suit on one axis and the moves do not spread evenly across the empire’s life — they bunch after a creditor existed, and the gaps shrink as litigation intensifies. Only the four founding LLCs (2009–2011) genuinely pre-date any claim; essentially every move from 2015 forward is post-creditor. Three artifacts are cleanest: BAM IP Holdings, LLC — a vehicle whose only apparent purpose is to hold the crown-jewel trademarks — organized by Ammon and Matthew McNeff twenty days after Castle Funding sued (a loaded gun never fired: the strip was never executed and the marks still name BAM Franchising Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM IP Holdings Business 14333873 Detail); the 2026 husk-shed, in which Legally Mine renamed to “LM OLDCO” and Centra Wealth registered the live “Legally Mine” assumed names two days after BAM filed its own RICO complaint, the brand leaping off the lien-encumbered husk onto a fresh Comer vehicle Filing History Centra Wealth Solutions LLC, Reg. No. 14421835; and the 2021 batch of four family homes quitclaimed to Evelyn McNeff in consecutive recorder entries about ten days before the sons’ federal control suit. Stated precisely: the honest overlay is roughly two dozen datable events, about half inside a threat window — a pattern that carries the statutory timing badge, not a population headline.

One badge the figures cannot close on their own — whether the Salem store resold for reasonably equivalent value — BAM closes for us. In its own verified complaint it pleads the resale as a “bona fide acquisition” (¶448), then withholds the single document that would prove it: the March 27, 2025 Baker asset-purchase agreement it controls and has never produced. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document Bricks & Minifigs 2023 FDD A party that puts a fact in issue and then suppresses the only proof invites the inference that the proof is unfavorable — here, that the sale was a below-value insider transfer, the “buyers” being BAM’s own repossession inspector and franchise recruiter, now its co-plaintiffs. A full-value, arm’s-length agreement would exonerate BAM in a page; its suppression is the evidence that it would not.

And the intent is admitted at the top. Daniel McNeff — CEO and sole owner of Legally Mine — teaches the strategy on tape: “my objective here today is to make you homeless … I want you to never own anything of significant value in your name … if you can show [a plaintiff’s attorney] there’s no motivation to sue you, that may very well end the lawsuit where it stands.” He ran that play on his own enterprise. That forecloses the innocent-estate-planning defense — the man who built and markets the machine cannot claim he did not know what it does — and it is what converts a timing pattern into actual intent.

Walked against Utah’s Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (§ 25-6-202), roughly seven of the eleven badges of fraud are satisfied on documented facts — insider transferees, retained control, substantially-all-assets liens, insolvency (BAM’s own negative equity and going-concern recitals FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026), and contemporaneous substantial debt — with the reasonably-equivalent-value badge upgraded toward prima facie by the adverse inference. On the civil standard that is a prima-facie actual-intent case at the apex, Daniel and Legally Mine, that the McNeffs would have to come forward to rebut.

The convolution does what asset-protection convolutions are built to do: it hides the intent behind the shells and, in the same motion, defeats RICO — fraudulent transfer is no federal predicate, every live injury traces to a facially lawful act, and the clean compartmentalization breaks the enterprise prong. So the theory leans not on racketeering but on the UVTA actual-intent badges, on alter-ego (the cross-debtor blanket lien, the shared 1337 E 750 N nexus, the shared nominee agents), and on the damages-paradox estoppel. The firewall holds throughout: asset protection done before a creditor exists is lawful, and the defense says so. The case is the after-a-creditor moves and the admitted intent — and beside every inculpatory reading the innocent one is left standing.

#The walls

Three things this investigation could not get past, and they matter as much as anything it found.

The Baker asset-purchase agreement is unfiled. The March 27, 2025 document that would show what the Salem store actually sold for, and whether the consideration was arm’s-length, is the hinge of the fraudulent-transfer question, and it is exactly the paper that has not been produced. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document Bricks & Minifigs 2023 FDD Without it, the dollar question, whether the store sold for fair value, stays open. But the rest of the story does not wait on it: the insider resale, the inspector who incorporated the buyer the day after the seizure, the franchisor running the store in between, all of that already sits on the public record, and BAM’s choice not to produce the one document in its own control is itself part of the picture, not merely a gap in it. In a courtroom that point has a name: when a party insists a sale was for fair value but will not produce the agreement that would prove it, the law lets the factfinder infer the document is unfavorable, an inference that can carry the value question without an appraisal. Gilbert v. Cosco, Inc., 989 F.2d 399, (10th Cir. 1993)βŒ– The paper is still missing; its absence is no longer neutral.

The franchise filing is internally inconsistent on whether BAM even has a parent. BAM’s own audited financial statements answer it: they consolidate at BAM Franchising, Inc. as the top entity, with only wholly-owned subsidiaries beneath it, so the likeliest reading is a contradictory filing, not a concealed parent. The FDD admits, in the CFO’s own bio, that a β€œFranchisor’s Parent” exists, while Item 1 declines to name one. FDD - Franchise Disclosure Document BAM FDD 2026 The certified Delaware record is now in hand, and it settles the lineage against a hidden parent: the State of Delaware’s Certificate of Merger shows the Oregon “BAM Franchising, Inc.” merged into a same-named Delaware corporation that survived, signed by Ammon McNeff as president, effective for accounting purposes on December 18, 2023 and filed with Delaware on April 18, 2024. Delaware Certificate of Merger - BAM Franchising (Oregon) into Delaware - File 2482543, Reg. No. 2482543 Delaware BAM Franchising Entity Status BAM did not merge up into a parent; it moved its own state of incorporation from Oregon to Delaware. And the absence of a parent sharpens the asset story rather than softening it: the value moved sideways, not up, toward BAM IP Holdings, the sons’ own sister company positioned one entity away from operating-company creditors, even as the marks themselves still name BAM Franchising as owner and the recorded transfer has not yet surfaced. The vehicle exists; the title is clouded; the transfer is not yet public. Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM IP Holdings Business 14333873 Detail USPTO TSDR, BAM (SN 98706031)

And the Comer identity is strongly corroborated, not formally confirmed, and it is worth being exact about the difference. The link from today’s β€œLegally Mine” wrapper to the iMall promoter named in the FTC’s 1999 stipulated judgment rests on far more than a shared name: the same middle initial; an age in iMall’s SEC filing that fits the present-day Comer; the same 1984 to 1985 Brigham Young University window in both records; the same Utah County base; the same seminar-program line of work; and a traceable career arc running from iMall through the Synergy direct-sales world to Centra. The one thing that would convert that to outright proof is a single record naming both in one breath, Comer’s signed 1999 FTC affidavit bearing the address he gave then, which survives only in the paper court file and the FTC’s own case file and is the one document we could not pull. That gap, and only that gap, is why this is marked strongly corroborated rather than confirmed; a Freedom of Information Act request for that record (FTC File No. 972-3224; FOIA Case No. FOIA-2026-00892) was filed in June 2026 and is pending.

#The way in

Here is the point of laying it all out. The people best positioned to act on this file need no further discovery, because the contradictions are already sitting in records they hold.

State franchise examiners and the Federal Trade Commission already possess the self-contradicting FDD. Minnesota registered and later cancelled BAM’s franchise offering; Wisconsin holds a 2026 registration that lists the organizing state as Oregon even as the FDD claims a Delaware identity. Order Order Franchise Reg - WI Dfi BAM Franchising Registration Detail Item 1 versus Item 2 is not something a journalist had to reconstruct, it is a discrepancy on file with the very regulators empowered to demand an amended disclosure or pull the registration. 16 C.F.R. Β§ 436.5, 16 CFR 436.5, Item 1βœ“

The SBA’s Office of Inspector General can pull a loan file in an afternoon. The IRS-levy complaint in this record alleges a conflict between Legally Mine’s representations and a federal pandemic-relief certification, an allegation, not a proven loan, and stated here as nothing more. McNeff v. McNeff, No. 2:21-cv-00048 (D. Utah), Dkt. 2 But an inspector general does not need a journalist’s inference; it can retrieve the underlying Paycheck Protection Program application and certification directly and see for itself whether the representations square.

State bar unauthorized-practice authorities have a template. Ohio supplied it through a consent decree and injunction. Final Order, Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine The same conduct, selling legal-document work and entity structuring across state lines, is reachable by the Utah and Oregon bar regulators through their own injunction-and-restitution machinery, on the long-standing civil-enforcement track that does not depend on the newest, non-retroactive statutes. Utah Code Β§ 78A-9-103, UT ST 78A-9-103, (1)(c)βœ“ ORS 9.160, OR ST 9.160βœ“ ORS 9.166, OR ST 9.166βœ“ Ohio’s consent decree is persuasive regulatory history they can build on.

Consumer-protection attorneys general have the marketing in hand. A preserved Legally Mine video teaches the Alaska holding-company strategy 23:33, the charging order, and the β€œrevenge-clause” in the company’s own voice, exactly the kind of cross-border solicitation a state AG examines for deceptive practices, against the backdrop of an out-of-state bar’s UPL finding. Final Order, Ohio Bar v. Legally Mine

β–Ά ON THE RECORD Β· DAN McNEFFCONFIRMED
β€œAll we've done here at Legally Mine is taken the semantics of these contracts, of your corporations, your LLCs.”
β–Ύ
Watch (28:55) β–Ά
Legally Mine intro slide: β€œYour Presenter β€” Dan McNeff” (00:09)

β€œYour Presenter β€” Dan McNeff” β€” the seminar’s own 00:09 intro slide, beside the Legally Mine logo, is the attribution: a source-context identification, not a biometric match. β€œGarrett Soelberg” is only the channel that uploaded the video, not the presenter. Quoted accurately; this is the product as sold, in the principal’s own words, not an admission of any crime.

One caution governs publication. Benjamin Schneider is under a gag. The ex parte temporary restraining order entered against him on June 2, 2026 includes clauses that forward-bar his speech about the plaintiffs and compel takedown of already-published videos with more than 1.3 million views, a posture that bears the heavy presumption against prior restraints that has stood since the Supreme Court vacated an injunction against publication in 1931. Near v. Minnesota ex rel. Olson, 283 U.S. 697, 713-20 (1931)βœ“ Org. for a Better Austin v. Keefe, 402 U.S. 415, 418-19 (1971)βœ“ Whatever the merits of that order, it means the most visible complainant is the one least able to speak. The franchisees and the consignor are no cleaner a workaround: the same order names Chrystal Law and Bryan Mansell by first name, and the former Salem franchisees have had to move to dissolve it on their own account. Counsel walking any of these doors should lean on a voice the order does not reach, a former Legally Mine client, or a regulator, and let the documents, not the gagged man, do the talking.

The gag may also prove a boomerang. Utah’s Public Expression Protection Act, the state’s anti-SLAPP statute, exists for exactly this fact pattern: a lawsuit aimed at punishing speech on a matter of public concern. A special motion under it freezes discovery the instant it is filed, forces the plaintiff to come forward with admissible proof that its case can actually win, dismisses with prejudice what cannot, and shifts the speaker’s legal fees onto the party that sued. Utah Code Β§ 78B-25-101 et seq. (UPEPA), UT ST 78B-25-101, -107βœ“ Mackey v. Krause, 2025 UT 37, 575 P.3d 1162βœ“ The timing should be treated as live, not forfeited: the response-date clock matters, but the statute leaves room for a late motion on good cause. A national franchise that sued a YouTuber for racketeering and won a takedown order without a hearing is, on that motion, the party with the most to lose: the exposure runs toward Bricks & Minifigs, not toward its critic. BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353

That is the reason to put this in one place. No single record in this file is a verdict. The Ohio order is narrow. The FDD contradiction is serious but civil. The transfers are alleged. The criminal case is unproven and the man at its center is presumed innocent. But the records align on the structure: the same family, the same Orem and Provo addresses, the same registered agents, the same product re-homed under a new name, the same assets pledged and the same intellectual property held one entity to the side. Utah UCC - Detail Filing History Legally Mine 2026 Entity, Reg. No. 14441858 Utah UCC No. Utah UCC - BAM IP Holdings Business 14333873 Detail Spread across a dozen states and as many dockets, each piece looks isolated. Assembled, with every claim marked for what it is, it becomes something a regulator can follow without a single new subpoena.

Reference

#The litigation map

Every matter in the record, in one place, sorted by arena. APEX = Daniel McNeff / Legally Mine. FRANCHISE = BAM and the Salem field.

The throughline below is a pattern argument, never a summed recovery: there is no single plaintiff or forum in which an “enterprise total” could be awarded.

The retaliation suit and the speech fight (FRANCHISE)

  • BAM v. Schneider / Mansell — Utah 4th Dist. 260402353 (thirteen-count racketeering + ex parte TRO; Judge Tony F. Graf Jr.). Co-plaintiffs: BAM Franchising, Ammon McNeff, Matthew McNeff, Josh Johnson, Brandon Best, Baker Bricks — all sharing one firm. The former Salem franchisees (Chrystal Law / Benjamin Gorman / BAMF Salem 1) have moved under Rule 65A(b)(4) to modify or dissolve the TRO as an unconstitutional prior restraint reaching identified non-parties (Dkt 63, SpencerWillson PLLC; pending). The defense lead is the UPEPA anti-SLAPP special motion and the prior-restraint challenge to clauses 5(j)/(k). Verified Compl., BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353 BAM v. Schneider-Mansell, No. 260402353 (ASSERTED — verified complaint; charges unadjudicated, presumption of innocence.)
  • Gorman / Law v. BAM — Oregon, Marion County, No. 260200029 (Judge Cornish): manufactured-default / breach / fraud-in-the-inducement; BAM’s termination demand $97,393.70. Compl., No. 260200029 (ASSERTED — franchisee claims pending in own forum.)

The adjudicated foundation (APEX)

  • Ohio State Bar v. Legally Mine — 2025-0037: consent decree enjoining Legally Mine and Daniel McNeff from the unauthorized practice of law; $5,000 penalty; admitted conduct, hearing waived. docket ↗ (ADJUDICATED via consent decree.)
  • Peterson v. Legally Mine — Bankr. W.D. Wash., Adv. 2:19-ap-01004: a $7,800 §549 avoidance judgment voided a 2017 transfer to Legally Mine (later satisfied) — a trustee has already clawed a transfer back from Legally Mine as voidable. CourtListener ↗ (ADJUDICATED — $7,800; satisfied 5/24/2019; stated individually, never summed.)
  • FTC v. iMall — the 1999 stipulated judgment naming Mark R. Comer FTC v. iMall, Inc., No. 2:99-CV-03650 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 12, 1999)βœ“: $4M redress, a $500K bond, and business-opportunity restraints (per the FTC press release). A different enterprise, carried only as the recidivism edge; identity ~95%. FTC ↗ (ADJUDICATED — 1999, vs Comer, different enterprise; edge only.)

The creditor siege — all resolved pre-merits (APEX)

All three MCA matters are resolved — $0 adjudicated — and the same serial pre-merits resolution is also what defeats open-ended RICO continuity. Encumbrances and creditor claims are never victim losses and are never summed.

  • Swiss Fund v. Legally Mine — Conn. FST-CV-25-6072810-S (funded $175,750; outstanding pleaded $312,500). Withdrawn 7/15/2025. CT docket ↗ (ASSERTED — withdrawn; $0 adjudicated.)
  • Castle Funding v. Legally Mine — N.Y. Sup. 158140/2025, eleven defendants (adds DDL Investments, Medisource Marketing, Big Blue Bungalow). Purchased-Amount face $310,000 (not cash funded); pleaded balance $55,428.66. Discontinued with prejudice 2/2/2026. complaint ↗ (CONFIRMED pleaded; discontinued w/prej; $0 adjudicated.)
  • DIB Capital v. Legally Mine — N.Y. Sup. 516236/2025 (purchase price $300,000; pleaded balance $501,250). Settled by contract. NYSCEF ↗ (ASSERTED — settled; $0 merits.)

The family and consumer matters (APEX)

  • McNeff v. McNeff — D. Utah 2:21-cv-00048: the sons’ federal suit, voluntarily dismissed with prejudice 2/10/2021 (the anchor that makes the 21% pledge two days later a settled-claim perfection, not a reactive transfer). CourtListener ↗ (CONFIRMED.)
  • Eliasieh v. Legally Mine — N.D. Cal. 3:18-cv-03622 ↗ + 3:19-cv-05977 ↗ (consumer arbitration; steered to private arbitration). (CONFIRMED.)
  • Property-rotation matters — the Utah County recorder chains (no contested docket): two consecutive-entry same-day batch transfers (2021-01-12 entries 5830–5833; 2023-02-26 entries 11822–11824) moving four AP-LLC homes to Evelyn McNeff and back out to new shells. Coordinated-batch recording is a record fact; fraudulent intent is undecided. (CONFIRMED — recorder-archived; intent stays INFERENCE.)

The civil posture that the badge engine now states (APEX)

The actual-intent UVTA theory and civil conspiracy are filed grounds (offense-uvta-actual-intent-badges + offense-civil-conspiracy-concert-of-action). On the held record they make out a civil prima-facie actual-intent fraudulent-transfer case at the APEX under Utah Code 25-6-202, UT ST 25-6-202, (2)βœ“: a confluence of roughly seven of the eleven badges permits the factfinder to infer actual intent and shifts the burden of production to the debtor — supported by Territorial Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Baird, 781 P.2d 452, 461 (Utah Ct. App. 1989)βŒ– and Tolle v. Fenley, 2006 UT App 78, 132 P.3d 63βœ“. The relief prayed for is avoidance plus a receiver/injunction under Utah Code 25-6-301, UT ST 25-6-301, (1)βœ“, which unwinds the conveyance rather than leaving a creditor behind the charging-order wall. The controlling adverse authority is confronted, not hidden: White v. Wardley (In re White), 144 F.4th 1216 (10th Cir. 2025)βœ“ construes reasonably-equivalent value and is distinguished on its arm’s-length facts; the Utah Code 25-6-304, UT ST 25-6-304, (5)(b)βœ“ safe harbor keeps the secured MCA liens and the Article-9 repossession off the avoidance target. (INFERENCE — civil prima-facie at APEX; intent stays a strong inference, not adjudicated.)

The pattern, carefully. The separate-looking matters — the consumer arbitration, the Ohio UPL decree, the father–sons war, the MCA suits, the property rotation, the renames — share purposes, participants, victims, and methods, which H.J. Inc. v. Nw. Bell Tel. Co., 492 U.S. 229, 240 (1989)βŒ– treats as a defendant’s regular way of doing business; the engineered separateness is evidence of relatedness, not separateness (United States v. Galati, 853 F. Supp. 152βŒ–; Cardenas v. Toyota Motor Corp., 418 F. Supp. 3d 1090βŒ–; United States v. Perholtz, 842 F.2d 343βŒ–).

The full docket inventory is in the Evidence ledger, and every relationship behind it is on the cast & business index.

Key dates in this thread
  • Apr 15, 2026Wisconsin registration detail shows a 2026 effective/uploaded registration while listing organization state as Oregon.
  • Sep 9, 2025Granted default judgment, sustained opposition, refused registration to BAM Products, and the current TTABVUE page shows termination/application…
  • Aug 5, 2025Filed motion for default judgment after the answer deadline passed in Opposition No. 91299939.
  • Feb 20, 2025Final Ohio UPL order enjoined Legally Mine and Daniel McNeff and imposed civil penalty.
  • Feb 20, 2025Ohio UPL order/consent-decree finding is a direct legality/credibility anchor for Legally Mine/McNeff conduct.
  • Jan 9, 2025Ohio UPL matter docketed/submitted board materials.
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