Supply Chain Security Mercor Hit by LiteLLM Supply Chain Attack The AI recruiting firm is investigating the incident as Lapsus$ claimed the theft of 4TB of Mercor data. By Ionut Arghire | April 2, 2026 (6:42 AM ET) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email AI recruiting firm Mercor has disclosed impact from the recent LiteLLM supply chain attack, after extortionists claimed the theft of 4 terabytes of data. The LiteLLM incident occurred on March 27 and was the result of the Trivy supply chain attack that was mounted a week before. “We believe that the compromise originated from the Trivy dependency used in our CI/CD security scanning workflow,” LiteLLM notes in its description of the incident. Using a maintainer’s compromised credentials, the TeamPCP hacking group published two malicious LiteLLM PyPI package versions, namely 1.82.7 and 1.82.8, which were available for download for roughly 40 minutes. LiteLLM is estimated to be present in 36% of cloud environments, and while the exposure window appears small, the malicious package versions were likely automatically downloaded by thousands, including Mercor. “We recently identified that we were one of thousands of companies impacted by a supply chain attack involving LiteLLM,” the startup said on Wednesday. Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading. “Our security team moved promptly to contain and remediate the incident. We are conducting a thorough investigation supported by leading third-party forensics experts,” Mercor added. While the company has not shared details on the impact, the Lapsus$ extortion group listed Mercor on its leak site on Monday, claiming the theft of over 4TB of data. Lapsus$ is auctioning the information, which allegedly includes candidate profiles, personally identifiable information, employer data, user accounts and credentials, video interviews, proprietary information, source code, keys and secrets, and TailScale VPN data. TeamPCP was recently reported to have partnered with Lapsus$ to monetize the data and access obtained as part of its broad supply chain campaign, and it is no surprise that the extortion group has listed Mercor on its leak site. However, the company has yet to confirm Lapsus$ claims. SecurityWeek has emailed Mercor for a statement on the matter and will update this article if the company responds. 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The supply chain attack involved malicious PyPI packages (versions 1.82.7 and 1.82.8) of the LiteLLM library, which were published for approximately 40 minutes using compromised maintainer credentials. The attack originated from a prior compromise of the Trivy security scanning tool used in CI/CD workflows, leading to automated downloads by dependent systems like Mercor. While specific patching guidance for LiteLLM is not provided in the article, impacted organizations must audit their dependencies for these malicious versions and rotate any exposed credentials.