Bricks and Minifigs Scandal Reveals Shocking Employee Confessions About Alleged Green Mold Cleanup Cover-Up
- Former employees of the popular Lego resale franchise have come forward with alarming claims that managers instructed staff to clean severely molded Lego bricks and minifigs with bleach and repackage them for sale, skirting health safety protocols.
- Whistleblowers allege that certain franchise locations knowingly accepted bulk buys of contaminated inventory from flood-damaged homes, then used industrial cleaning agents to mask visible mold before placing the sets back on shelves.
- The leaked internal memo suggests that regional supervisors pressured store managers to meet aggressive sales quotas, leading to the deliberate hiding of water-damaged and smelly Lego pieces from quality control checks.
- Multiple customers have reported rashes and allergic reactions after opening sealed "mystery bags" and bulk bins, with one viral TikTok showing a minifig covered in what appears to be black mildew under UV light.
- Corporate has launched a "full investigation" and temporarily suspended franchise agreements for two locations in the Midwest, but angry collectors are calling for a third-party health audit and nationwide product recall.