Lucky Lady Casino Data Breach Investigation
Casino LLC dba Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino reported a data incident that may have involved sensitive personal information. According to regulatory filings, the information at issue may have included names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, driver’s license numbers, passport numbers, and health insurance information. Public details are limited, but affected individuals should review any notice they received and take steps to protect themselves. If you received a letter and want to understand your options, you can fill out the form on this page to see whether you may qualify for a claim.
Casino LLC dba Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino operates in the casino industry in California. According to available regulatory filings, the company reported a hacking/IT incident involving information stored on its network. Publicly available details remain limited at this time.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Casino LLC dba Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino
- Industry: Casino
- Location: California
- Incident type: Reported as a hacking/IT incident
- Incident dates listed in filing: May 14, 2025 and May 18, 2025
- Notice date: June 10, 2026
- Public listing date: June 11, 2026
- Information that may have been involved: Name, Social Security number, date of birth, driver’s license number, passport number, and health insurance information
- Affected population: Not publicly disclosed in the available filing
- Known regulators: State Attorney General filings referenced in Vermont, Maine, and California
What Happened?
Detailed information from the official notice is not publicly accessible at this time. The summary below is based on regulatory filings rather than a fully available public notice.
According to the filing, the incident was categorized as a hacking/IT incident affecting data on the company’s network. The filing lists May 14, 2025 and May 18, 2025 as incident dates, and a consumer notice date of June 10, 2026. A public Attorney General listing appears to have followed on June 11, 2026.
The available materials do not publicly explain exactly how the event happened, when it was discovered, or how many people were affected. If you received a notice letter, that document may provide more specific details about what information was associated with you.
What Information Was Exposed?
Based on the regulatory filing, the information that may have been involved includes the following categories:
- Name
- Social Security number
- Date of birth
- Driver’s license number
- Passport number
- Health insurance information
These are sensitive data elements because they can be used for identity theft, tax fraud, account verification abuse, or medical identity issues. The public filing does not clarify whether every affected person had all of these data types involved, so individuals should review any notice they received for the most accurate account of their own situation.
What Should You Do Next?
- Read your notice carefully. Check whether the letter identifies the specific information tied to you and whether any credit monitoring or identity protection services were offered.
- Protect your credit files. If Social Security, driver’s license, or passport information may have been involved, consider placing a fraud alert or security freeze with the major credit bureaus and review your free credit reports for unfamiliar activity.
- Watch financial, tax, and medical records. Review bank statements, insurance explanations of benefits, and any medical bills for services you do not recognize. Sensitive personal data can be misused in more than one way.
- Be alert for phishing. After a reported data incident, scammers may send emails, texts, or calls that mention the company by name to make their messages seem legitimate. Do not click links or share personal information unless you independently confirm the source.
- Keep records and ask questions. Save the notice, document any suspicious activity or out-of-pocket losses, and contact us using the form provided on this page if you want to discuss whether the reported incident may support a legal claim.
Your Legal Rights
Your legal rights depend on the facts of the incident and the state laws that apply to you. In general, people affected by a reported data incident may have the right to know what happened, what categories of information were involved, and what steps the organization is taking in response.
A reported security incident does not automatically mean you have a lawsuit or that compensation is guaranteed. But when highly sensitive information is involved, important legal questions can arise about data security practices, the adequacy of notice, and whether affected individuals were given meaningful help after the incident was identified.
If you experience identity theft, fraudulent tax filings, medical identity issues, or other misuse after receiving a notice, those facts may matter. An attorney can help evaluate whether the reported circumstances support a claim and what documentation may be useful.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents individuals in data breach and privacy matters and has experience evaluating incident notices, exposed data categories, and companies’ response obligations. Our team works to explain these cases in plain English so people can understand what happened and what options may be available.
If you received a notice connected to Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can review the reported facts, help you understand what questions to ask, and assess whether you may have a viable claim. Filling out the form on this page is a simple way to request a case review.
If you received a breach notification letter from Lucky Lady Casino:
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.










