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The Fairy Bricks warehouse after burglars broke in.
The Fairy Bricks warehouse after burglars broke in. Photograph: Facebook/Fairy Bricks/PA
The Fairy Bricks warehouse after burglars broke in. Photograph: Facebook/Fairy Bricks/PA

Charity founder left in tears after theft of Lego bricks for sick children

This article is more than 3 years old

Around 18,000 sets stolen from Fairy Bricks’ Huddersfield warehouse

The founder of a charity that donates Lego to children in hospital has been left in tears after burglars stole around 18,000 sets of the building bricks from his warehouse.

Kevin Gascoigne said he had been in “a pretty dark place” since the break-in at the Fairy Bricks headquarters in Moldgreen, Huddersfield, on Sunday night, and urged anyone who spotted any of the stolen sets for sale to contact the police.

The 44-year-old, who founded the charity in 2014, said he was told about the burglary, which he believes involved at least seven people, by his neighbour at Shaw business park on Monday morning.

He said: “I came down and that was it really. I witnessed the devastation and saw what they’d taken. We’ve been in bits.

“It’s been more difficult for me today. I’ve spent today crying a lot and I’m a 44-year-old fat bloke with a beard, I’m not used to crying.

“We’re in a pretty dark place but we won’t be here for long because the kids still need our help. We’ll bounce back.

“We have put pictures of some of our stolen sets on Facebook so if anyone was to see those in unusually large volumes, please give West Yorkshire police a call.”

Gascoigne said he had been overwhelmed by the comments he had received after he put out an appeal for “positive noise” on Facebook. More than 100 people from around the world, including France and Australia, had commented on the post on Tuesday afternoon about their experiences of Fairy Bricks donations.

Gascoigne said: “The positive comments mean more to us than money, money’s not always the answer. I know it’s kind of the modern way and people have been making donations on our website but we haven’t discussed setting a page up or anything.”

He added: “I just needed to hear those comments this afternoon. And even reading those had been making me cry, but in a different way.”

Gascoigne set up the charity after donating some of his own unused Lego sets to Calderdale Royal hospital in Halifax and seeing the impact they had.

The charity gave 50,000 Lego sets to 185 UK hospitals over the last 12 months and donated 32,400 kits to the children of NHS workers at the height of the coronavirus pandemic.

He said: “We can’t make them better but we work with the play specialists and happy children get better faster.”

West Yorkshire police appealed for anyone with information about the burglary to contact them. A force spokeswoman said: “The suspects gained entry to the building and took a large number of Lego sets from inside, before loading them into a vehicle and making off.

“The suspects then returned a short time later, taking more Lego sets. They also took a van belonging to the business, which has since been recovered.”

Anyone with information can contact police using the online chat service or by calling 101, quoting crime reference 13200349738.

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