Security News

Cybersecurity news aggregator

⚔️
HIGH Attacks SecurityWeek

DocketWise Data Breach Impacts 143,000

The DocketWise data breach involved a threat actor cloning third-party partner repositories using valid credentials, which were used as a data migration pipeline for the application. The compromised data includes highly sensitive PII, financial information, and medical records for over 143,000 individuals. While unauthorized access has been closed, the investigation is ongoing and the scope may widen.
Read Full Article →

Data Breaches DocketWise Data Breach Impacts 143,000 Hackers accessed names, addresses, Social Security numbers, financial information, and medical data from third-party partner repositories. By Ionut Arghire | May 25, 2026 (5:37 AM ET) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Immigration and legal case management platform DocketWise is notifying over 143,000 people that their personal, financial, and medical information was compromised in a data breach. The incident, the company says, involved third-party partner repositories that a threat actor cloned using valid credentials. DocketWise launched an investigation into the matter in October 2025, and this year determined that some of the cloned repositories were used as a data migration pipeline for the DocketWise application, which contains law firm records, including personally identifiable information (PII). In an incident notice on its website, the company revealed that the potentially impacted PII includes names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and passport and government ID numbers. Additionally, the hackers accessed financial account numbers and credentials, payment card numbers and access information, tax identification numbers, health insurance policy numbers, and medical condition or treatment information. The username and access information for non-financial accounts were also compromised. The impacted information varies per individual, the company notes. Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading. DocketWise says that the unauthorized access to the data has been closed, and that it has no evidence that the compromised personal information has been published online. The company started notifying the potentially impacted individuals in early April, when it told the Maine Attorney General’s Office that approximately 116,000 people were affected. In a more recent filing with the Maine AGO, DocketWise updated that number to 143,480. As the company’s investigation into the incident continues, however, the scope of the data breach could widen. DocketWise is providing the potentially affected individuals with two years of free credit monitoring and identity restoration services, and encourages them to remain vigilant against identity theft and fraud attacks. Related: Millions Impacted Across Several US Healthcare Data Breaches Related: 7-Eleven Data Breach Confirmed After ShinyHunters Ransom Demand Related: American Lending Center Data Breach Affects 123,000 Individuals Related: Government to Scrutinize Instructure Over Canvas Disruption, Data Breach Written By Ionut Arghire Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek. Daily Briefing Newsletter Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights. More from Ionut Arghire Cisco Patches Critical Vulnerability in Secure Workload Apple Rejected 2 Million App Store Submissions in 2025 for Security and Fraud Prevention Socket Raises $60 Million at $1 Billion Valuation Microsoft Patches Exploited UnDefend and RedSun Defender Zero-Days Microsoft Rolls Out Mitigations for ‘YellowKey’ BitLocker Bypass Over 320 NPM Packages Hit by Fresh Mini Shai-Hulud Supply Chain Attack GitHub Confirms Hack Impacting 3,800 Internal Repositories Verizon DBIR 2026: Vulnerability Exploitation Overtakes Credential Theft as Top Breach Vector Latest News Over 5,500 GitHub Repositories Infected in ‘Megalodon’ Supply Chain Attack ‘Underminr’ Vulnerability Lets Attackers Hide Malicious Connections Behind Trusted Domains Drupal Vulnerability in Hacker Crosshairs Shortly After Disclosure In Other News: Industrial Router Exploitation, CISA KEV Nomination Form, Gas Station Hacking Canadian Man Arrested for Operating Kimwolf Botnet ‘First VPN’ Cybercrime Service Disrupted, Administrator Arrested TrendAI Patches Apex One Zero-Day Exploited in the Wild Grafana Says Codebase and Other Data Stolen via TanStack Supply Chain Attack Trending Daily Briefing Newsletter Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts. Virtual Event: Threat Detection and Incident Response Summit May 20, 2026 Delve into big-picture strategies to reduce attack surfaces, improve patch management, conduct post-incident forensics, and tools and tricks needed in a modern organization. Register Webinar: Third-Party Risk in Practice June 4, 2026 Organizations are investing heavily in third-party risk management, but breaches, delays, and blind spots continue to persist. Join this live webinar as we examine the gap between how organizations think their third-party risk programs are performing and what’s actually happening in practice. Register People on the Move Joe Chen has become Chief Technology Officer at Trellix. Usercentrics has named Pawan Hegde as COO and Elena Ignatova as CPTO. SecureAuth has named Mark van Oppen as Chief Revenue Officer. More People On The Move Expert Insights Caught Off Guard: Securing AI After It Hits Production As enterprises rush AI projects into production, security teams are increasingly being forced into reactive mode. (Joshua Goldfarb) Cyber Resilience is the New Business Continuity Plan The organizations best prepared to face disruption are those that align security, continuity and risk management around what the business cannot afford to lose. (Steve Durbin) Enhancing Data Center Security Without Sacrificing Performance For AI data centers, where the stakes are the highest and performance constraints are the tightest, security and performance are no longer a zero-sum game. (Nadir Izrael) Is the SOC Obsolete, and We Just Haven’t Admitted It Yet? Many AI-first enterprises have already embraced sovereign architectures for general AI initiatives; cybersecurity—and the SOC—should be next. (Danelle Au) The Mythos Moment: Enterprises Must Fight Agents with Agents Only with the right platform and an agentic, AI-driven defense, will enterprises be able to protect themselves in the agentic era. (Etay Maor) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email

Share this article