Interstate Management Data Breach Investigation
According to a filing with the Maine Attorney General, Interstate Management Company, LLC reported an external system hacking incident tied to November 19, 2025. The filing says the activity was discovered on April 23, 2026, and written notices were sent on May 26, 2026. Available incident data indicates that names, Social Security numbers, and financial account numbers may have been involved for some individuals. If you received a notice, review it carefully and fill out the form on this page if you want to learn whether you may qualify for a claim.
Interstate Management Company, LLC is a Texas-based company in the hospitality industry. Public regulator records list the company in Plano, Texas. If you received a notice connected to this reported incident, understanding the available facts and your response options can help you protect your information.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Interstate Management Company, LLC
- Industry: Hospitality
- Location listed in the filing: Plano, Texas
- Incident date reported: November 19, 2025
- Discovery date: April 23, 2026, according to the Maine filing
- Notice date: May 26, 2026
- Incident type: Reported as an external system breach (hacking) in the filing
- Affected individuals: 22,743 total, including 3 Maine residents, according to the filing
- Information that may have been involved: Name, Social Security number, and financial account number, based on the available incident data
- Protection services: 12 months of IDX credit monitoring was reportedly offered
What Happened?
According to the Maine Attorney General data breach notice page, the company reported a hacking-related incident associated with November 19, 2025. The same filing says the activity was discovered on April 23, 2026, and that written consumer notices were mailed on May 26, 2026. Public regulator summaries often provide only limited technical detail, so the filing does not fully explain how the event occurred or how long an unauthorized party may have had access. The filing lists outside counsel Mullen Coughlin LLC as the submitting contact at (267) 930-4786.
What Information Was Exposed?
The public filing indicates that information involving a name or other personal identifier may have been involved. The structured incident data available for this post further identifies Social Security numbers and financial account numbers as potentially affected categories. Because regulator summaries can be abbreviated, the most accurate source for any one person is the notice they received directly. If you have that notice, compare its description of the affected data with your account and credit records.
What Should You Do Next?
- Read the notice carefully. Check what the notice says about the timing of the event, the categories of information that may have been involved, and any enrollment deadline for free protection services.
- Enroll in free monitoring if it was offered. The Maine filing says 12 months of identity theft protection and credit monitoring through IDX was offered. If you received a code or instructions, use them before the deadline.
- Watch your financial and credit activity. Review bank statements, credit card activity, and your credit reports for unfamiliar accounts, charges, or address changes.
- Consider a fraud alert or credit freeze. A fraud alert can add a warning to your credit file, while a freeze can make it harder for new credit to be opened in your name without your permission.
- Keep records and ask questions. Save the notice, screenshots, letters, and any expenses or time spent responding. If you want to understand whether you may qualify for a claim, you can fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC.
Your Legal Rights
People affected by a reported data incident may have legal rights under state consumer-protection, privacy, or negligence laws, depending on the facts. Those rights can include seeking more information about what happened, what data categories were involved, what protective services were offered, and whether any losses can be tied to the event. In some situations, individuals may be able to pursue claims for out-of-pocket losses, time spent addressing misuse, or the increased risk created by exposure of sensitive data. Whether any claim is available depends on the specific facts and the laws that apply, so a case review is important.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents individuals in data breach and privacy matters and understands how to evaluate incident notices, filing timelines, and the real-world risks that can follow exposure of sensitive information. Our team can review the publicly available information about the reported Interstate Management incident, explain the next steps in plain language, and help you understand whether you may have grounds to pursue a claim. If you received a notice and have questions, contacting Strauss Borrelli PLLC can help you make an informed decision about your options.
If you received a breach notification letter from Interstate Management:
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.










