AssetMark Data Breach Investigation
A Texas regulatory filing appears to list a reported data incident involving AssetMark Trust Company, a financial services company. Public details are limited, and the underlying notice describing the timing, cause, and scope of the event was not publicly available in the materials we reviewed. The filing indicates that personal information may have included names and Social Security numbers. If you received a notice or are worried you may be affected, fill out the form on this page to see whether Strauss Borrelli PLLC can help evaluate your options.
AssetMark Trust Company is identified in the available record as a financial services company located in Arizona. Publicly accessible reporting about this reported incident remains limited, and the Texas listing we reviewed did not include a full narrative notice explaining the event.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: AssetMark Trust Company.
- Industry: Financial services.
- Location: Arizona, based on the structured incident data provided.
- Public listing date: A Texas Attorney General breach-report listing was published on May 8, 2026.
- Reported affected population: 9,158, according to the structured filing data available for this post.
- Reported information: Names and Social Security numbers may have been involved.
- What is still unclear: The public materials we reviewed did not provide the incident date, discovery date, cause, or a full narrative notice.
What Happened?
Publicly available details about this reported incident are limited. The Texas Attorney General breach-report portal appears to list the company, but the retrieved page text did not include a detailed notice explaining when the event occurred, how it was discovered, or whether a third party was involved. Because that fuller notice was not publicly accessible in the materials we reviewed, this summary is based on the regulatory listing and structured reporting data currently available.
For affected consumers, that means some important questions remain open. At this stage, the available information does not allow the public to confirm the timeline of the incident or the specific security issue that led to the report.
What Information Was Exposed?
Based on the structured filing data associated with the public listing, the reported information may have included names and Social Security numbers. Those are highly sensitive data elements because they can be misused for identity theft, new-account fraud, and tax-related fraud.
No broader breakdown of data types was available in the public materials we reviewed. That means it is not currently clear whether any financial account information, dates of birth, driver’s license information, or online account credentials were also involved.
What Should You Do Next?
- Review any notice carefully. If you received a letter or email about this matter, keep a copy and note any reference numbers, response deadlines, or credit-monitoring instructions.
- Watch for identity-theft warning signs. Review bank, credit-card, loan, tax, and benefits activity for transactions or claims you do not recognize.
- Consider a fraud alert or credit freeze. If your Social Security number may have been involved, these tools can help reduce the risk of new-account fraud.
- Check your credit reports. Look for unfamiliar accounts, hard inquiries, address changes, or other inaccuracies and dispute anything suspicious promptly.
- Stay alert for phishing. Scammers often use reported incidents as a reason to send fake emails, texts, or calls asking for passwords or financial information.
- Ask about your legal options. If you received a notice or have seen suspicious activity, fill out the form on this page to see whether Strauss Borrelli PLLC can help evaluate a potential claim.
Your Legal Rights
If your personal information was involved in a reported data incident, you may have legal rights depending on the facts and the laws that apply. In some situations, consumers may be entitled to notice, information about what data was involved, and any protective services the company offers, such as credit monitoring or identity-theft assistance.
You may also be able to seek recovery for certain documented losses or time spent addressing misuse of your information, but whether a claim exists depends on facts that are not yet public here. Speaking with a lawyer can help you understand your options without requiring you to decide anything right away.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC focuses on helping consumers affected by data breaches and privacy incidents, and the firm has experience evaluating breach notices, regulatory disclosures, and the real-world harms that can follow exposure of sensitive information. When public details are limited, our team works to identify what was reported, what questions remain unanswered, and whether affected people may have viable claims.
If you received a notice related to this reported incident or believe your information may be at risk, you can contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC using the form provided on this page for a free, no-obligation review.
If you received a breach notification letter from AssetMark Trust Company:
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.










