Johnson, Webbert, & Beard Data Breach Investigation
Johnson, Webbert, & Beard LLP reported a security incident to state regulators that may have involved sensitive personal information. According to a Maine Attorney General filing, written notices were sent on May 7, 2026 after the matter was discovered on April 7, 2026. If you received a notice, it is important to review the letter, enroll in any offered protection, and watch your accounts closely. You can also fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC and see whether you may qualify for a claim.
Johnson, Webbert, & Beard LLP is a Maine law firm in the legal services industry, based in Topsham, Maine. A public filing with the Maine Attorney General indicates the firm reported a hacking-related security incident and later sent written notices to certain individuals.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Johnson, Webbert, & Beard LLP
- Industry: Legal Services
- Location listed in the filing: Topsham, Maine
- Incident type: External system breach (hacking), according to the Maine filing
- Reported incident date: September 15, 2025
- Discovery date: April 7, 2026
- Consumer notice date: May 7, 2026
- Affected population: 1,418 people total, including 1,013 Maine residents
- Information that may have been involved: name or other personal identifier together with data the structured reporting associates with Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, and health records
- Protection offered: 12 months of IDX identity theft protection and credit monitoring
- Contact listed in the filing: Christa Kumming, McDonald Hopkins, (248) 402-4082
What Happened?
According to the Maine Attorney General filing, the matter was described as an external system breach, or hacking incident. The filing reports an incident date of September 15, 2025, a discovery date of April 7, 2026, and written consumer notices mailed on May 7, 2026. Publicly available materials do not currently explain exactly how the intrusion occurred or which systems were affected, so some details remain limited unless additional notice materials become public.
What Information Was Exposed?
The public Maine listing states that a name or other personal identifier may have been involved together with additional data. Structured reporting associated with this incident lists Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, and health records as data types that may have been affected. Because online summaries can be incomplete and the posted notice copy is redacted, the most reliable source for your situation is the letter you received.
What Should You Do Next?
- Read your notice carefully. Confirm what information the company says may have been involved and keep the letter for your records.
- Enroll in the free IDX protection. The filing says 12 months of identity theft protection and credit monitoring were offered, and enrollment deadlines in breach letters are often shorter than people expect.
- Watch financial accounts and credit reports. Review bank, card, and loan activity for unfamiliar transactions and request your free credit reports to look for new accounts or inquiries you do not recognize.
- Consider a fraud alert or credit freeze. These tools can make it harder for identity thieves to open credit in your name, especially if Social Security numbers may have been involved.
- Monitor medical and insurance activity. If health information may have been affected, review explanation-of-benefits statements, provider portals, and insurer communications for unfamiliar claims or services.
- Document problems and ask for help. Save letters, screenshots, and notes about any suspicious activity, and fill out the form on this page if you want Strauss Borrelli PLLC to assess whether you may qualify for a claim.
Your Legal Rights
When a company reports a data incident involving sensitive information, affected people may have legal rights depending on the facts, the safeguards that were in place, the content and timing of the notice, and the laws that apply. Potential claims in data incident matters can relate to whether reasonable security was used and whether consumers suffered financial loss, out-of-pocket costs, lost time, or other concrete harm. If you received notice or believe your information was misused, you may want to speak with counsel promptly because deadlines can apply.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC focuses on data breach and privacy matters and has experience evaluating reported security incidents involving highly sensitive personal information. Our team can review what the public filing says, help you compare it with your notice, and explain whether a lawsuit or other claim may be available. If you were notified about the Johnson, Webbert, & Beard LLP incident, you can contact us using the form provided on this page for a free case review.
If you received a breach notification letter from Johnson, Webbert, & Beard LLP:
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.










