TransGlobal Insurance Agency Data Breach Investigation
TransGlobal Insurance Agency, Inc. has been identified in a California Attorney General filing related to a reported hacking or IT incident. Publicly available information is limited, but the filing indicates certain personal information may have been involved. If you received a notice or think your information may be affected, it is important to take practical steps now to protect your identity and financial accounts. You can also fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC and learn whether you may have legal options.
TransGlobal Insurance Agency, Inc. is a Nevada-based company in the insurance industry. Because insurance businesses often collect sensitive identifying information to open and service accounts, a reported cybersecurity incident can create serious concerns for customers, applicants, and others whose information may have been provided to the company.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: TransGlobal Insurance Agency, Inc.
- Industry: Insurance
- Location: Nevada
- Reported incident type: Hacking/IT Incident
- Reported incident date: February 18, 2026
- Public listing date: April 29, 2026
- Regulatory listing: California Attorney General data security breach reporting portal
- Information that may have been involved: Name, address, Social Security number, date of birth, and driver’s license number
- Number of affected individuals: Not disclosed in the materials reviewed
- Consumer notice date: Not publicly available in the materials reviewed
What Happened?
According to a California Attorney General filing, TransGlobal Insurance Agency reported a hacking/IT incident associated with February 18, 2026. The filing appears to have been publicly listed on April 29, 2026. However, the materials reviewed did not include an accessible consumer notice or detailed narrative describing how the incident occurred, when it was discovered, or what steps were taken immediately afterward. That means some important details remain unclear, and the currently available information should be read as a regulatory report rather than a full factual account.
What Information Was Exposed?
The available filing indicates that the information that may have been involved includes the following personal data:
- Name
- Address
- Social Security number
- Date of birth
- Driver’s license number
If these data elements were accessed by an unauthorized party, they could create identity theft and fraud risks because they can be used to open accounts, impersonate individuals, or answer verification questions. Because the public materials are limited, affected people should not assume every listed data element applies to them personally; the best source for that answer is any notice they received directly.
What Should You Do Next?
- Read any notice carefully. If you received a letter or email about this matter, review it for the date range involved, the specific information listed for you, and any services or contact information provided.
- Monitor financial and insurance-related activity. Watch bank accounts, credit card statements, explanation-of-benefits forms, and other account activity for charges, claims, or changes you do not recognize.
- Consider placing a fraud alert or credit freeze. This is especially important when Social Security numbers or driver’s license numbers may have been involved.
- Be alert for phishing attempts. After a reported cyber incident, scammers may send texts, emails, or calls pretending to be from the company, a bank, or a government agency.
- Keep records and seek guidance. Save notices, screenshots, credit monitoring enrollment details, and evidence of suspicious activity. If you want to understand your options, fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC.
Your Legal Rights
Your legal rights depend on the facts of the incident, the laws that apply, and whether you experienced misuse of your information or other harm. In many data-incident matters, individuals may have the right to receive notice, ask what categories of information were involved, and pursue claims if a company failed to use reasonable safeguards or did not respond appropriately after learning of a security issue.
When highly sensitive identifiers such as Social Security numbers, dates of birth, and driver’s license numbers may be involved, people often want to know whether they can seek compensation for out-of-pocket losses, time spent addressing the problem, credit-related harm, or the risk created by exposure of that information. A lawyer can evaluate the available facts and explain the next steps, but this article is general information and not individualized legal advice.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents consumers in data breach and privacy matters and has experience analyzing reported cybersecurity incidents, notice letters, and potential claims arising from unauthorized access to personal information. Our team focuses on clear communication, practical next steps, and careful review of whether a company may have failed to protect sensitive data appropriately.
If you received notice relating to the TransGlobal Insurance Agency incident or are concerned your information may have been involved, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can review the available facts and help you understand your options. Use the form on this page to get in touch.
If you received a breach notification letter from TransGlobal Insurance Agency, Inc.:
We would like to speak with you about your rights and potential legal remedies in response to this data breach. Please fill out the form, below, or contact us at 872.263.1100 or sam@straussborrelli.com.










