AssuranceAmerican Data Breach Investigation
A California Attorney General filing lists a reported hacking/IT incident involving AssuranceAmerica Managing General Agency, LLC. Public details are limited, but the filing indicates certain personal and insurance-related information may have been involved. If you received a notice or believe your information may be affected, it is wise to review your credit, watch for phishing, and preserve any communications you receive. You can also fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC and learn whether you may qualify for a claim.
AssuranceAmerica Managing General Agency, LLC is an insurance company identified in California regulatory materials. Based on the public filing reviewed, the company was associated with a reported hacking/IT incident involving information stored on its network. Publicly available details remain limited, so the summary below is based on the California Attorney General listing and the structured incident data provided.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: AssuranceAmerica Managing General Agency, LLC
- Industry: Insurance
- Reported incident type: Hacking/IT incident
- Incident date listed in the filing: March 17, 2026
- California public listing date: June 17, 2026
- Information that may have been involved: name, contact information, Social Security number, driver’s license number, tax ID number, auto insurance policy information, claims-related information, and driver or vehicle information
- Affected population: Not publicly stated in the materials reviewed
- What is still unclear: when the issue was discovered, when notices were sent, and whether credit monitoring was offered
What Happened?
According to a California Attorney General filing, AssuranceAmerica Managing General Agency, LLC was linked to a reported hacking/IT incident, with March 17, 2026 listed as the incident date. The filing was publicly listed on the California portal on June 17, 2026.
At this time, the publicly available materials reviewed do not provide a full narrative explaining how the incident allegedly occurred, when it was discovered, or how many people may have been affected. Because a detailed consumer notice was not available in the materials reviewed, readers should treat the currently available information as limited and subject to update if a fuller notice or supplemental filing is released.
What Information Was Exposed?
Based on the structured regulatory information available, the data that may have been involved includes identifiers and insurance-related details. Reported data elements may have included:
- Name
- Contact information
- Social Security number
- Driver’s license number
- Tax ID number
- Auto insurance policy information
- Claims-related information
- Driver or vehicle information
If these categories were accessed, the risks can go beyond ordinary spam. Sensitive identifiers such as Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and tax ID numbers may raise identity theft concerns, while policy, claim, and vehicle details may also increase the risk of targeted phishing or scams that appear connected to insurance matters.
What Should You Do Next?
- Review any notice you receive carefully. Compare the notice to the California filing and note exactly what information the company says may have been involved.
- Consider stronger credit protections. If Social Security number, driver’s license number, or tax ID information may be at issue, a fraud alert or credit freeze may help reduce misuse.
- Monitor financial, tax, and insurance activity. Watch bank and credit accounts, review your credit reports, and be alert for unfamiliar policy changes, claims activity, or communications referencing your vehicle or insurance history.
- Be cautious with emails, texts, and phone calls. A scammer with insurance-related details may try to sound credible. Do not click links or provide more information unless you independently verify the sender.
- Keep records. Save letters, emails, screenshots, denial notices, and any expenses or time spent addressing possible misuse. Documentation can be important if problems develop later.
- Get your situation reviewed if you are concerned. If you received a notice or suspect your information was involved, you can fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC about your rights.
Your Legal Rights
People affected by a reported data incident may have legal rights, but the exact options depend on facts that are not yet fully public. In general, companies that collect sensitive personal information may have duties under state and federal law to use reasonable safeguards and to provide notice when certain information is involved in a qualifying security event.
If later evidence shows that sensitive data was exposed because of inadequate security practices or deficient notice, some individuals may be able to seek remedies related to out-of-pocket losses, time spent responding, or other legally recognized harm. Whether any claim exists here will depend on the facts that emerge, the type of information involved, and the laws that apply to the affected person.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC focuses on representing individuals in data breach and privacy matters. Our firm has experience investigating reported security incidents, reviewing notices and regulatory filings, and helping consumers understand whether the facts may support a legal claim.
We aim to give clear, practical guidance without pressure. If you received a letter related to this reported AssuranceAmerica incident, or if you are dealing with suspicious credit, tax, or insurance activity, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can review the available information and explain possible next steps. To speak with our team, use the form provided on this page.
If you received a breach notification letter from AssuranceAmerica:
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.










