Phoenix Environmental Laboratories Data Breach Investigation
Phoenix Environmental Laboratories, Inc., a Connecticut laboratory company, was publicly listed on the Vermont Attorney General’s security breach notices portal on July 1, 2026. The available filing data indicates that information that may have been involved includes names, Social Security numbers, and medical record numbers. Detailed information from the official notice is not publicly accessible at this time, so some important facts remain unknown. If you received a notice or believe your information may be affected, review your accounts carefully and fill out the form on this page to see whether you may qualify for a claim.
Phoenix Environmental Laboratories, Inc. is a laboratory company based in Connecticut. Publicly available regulatory information connects the company to a security breach notice listing in Vermont. Because the underlying notice is not publicly accessible from the available materials, only limited facts can be confirmed at this time.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Phoenix Environmental Laboratories, Inc.
- Industry: Laboratory
- Location: Connecticut
- Public regulatory listing: Vermont Attorney General security breach notices portal on July 1, 2026
- Incident date: Not publicly disclosed in the available materials
- Notice date: Not publicly disclosed in the available materials
- Information that may have been involved: Name, Social Security number, and medical record number
- Number of affected people: Not publicly disclosed in the available materials
What Happened?
Detailed information from the official notice is not publicly accessible at this time. The summary here is based on regulatory filings, including a public listing on the Vermont Attorney General’s security breach notices portal.
The currently available materials do not publicly explain when the event occurred, when it was discovered, how access may have happened, or whether a third party was involved. Until a full notice or additional filing becomes available, readers should treat those details as unresolved rather than assume facts that have not been confirmed.
What Information Was Exposed?
According to the available filing data, the information that may have been involved includes a name, Social Security number, and medical record number. That combination can be particularly sensitive because it may increase the risk of identity theft, tax fraud, or misuse of medical-related information.
The public materials do not currently show whether every affected person had the same data elements involved. They also do not explain whether any other categories of information were implicated. If you receive a direct notice, that notice should be your best source for the specific information tied to you.
What Should You Do Next?
- Save any notice you receive. Keep the letter, email, envelope, and any claim or reference numbers. If the notice identifies the data elements involved, preserve that information.
- Enroll in any free protection that is offered. If the company or a related vendor offers credit monitoring or identity protection, consider signing up before the deadline.
- Watch your credit and place added protections if needed. Review your credit reports, consider placing a fraud alert, and consider a credit freeze if your Social Security number may have been involved.
- Review medical and insurance statements. Because a medical record number may have been involved, check explanation-of-benefits forms, provider bills, and insurance activity for unfamiliar services or claims.
- Document suspicious activity and expenses. Keep records of unauthorized accounts, collection calls, denied claims, time spent responding, and any out-of-pocket losses.
- Ask about your legal options. If you received a notice or are seeing signs of misuse, fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC and learn whether you may qualify for a claim.
Your Legal Rights
People affected by a reported data incident may have legal rights, but those rights depend on the facts, the law that applies, and whether misuse or other harm occurred. In some situations, the law may allow claims related to unreasonable data security practices, delayed notice, or the costs of responding to identity theft risks.
Possible relief can include reimbursement for certain out-of-pocket losses, time spent addressing fraud, credit or identity monitoring, and other remedies allowed by law. Because the public record here is limited, any evaluation of potential claims should be based on the actual notice you received and the facts known in your situation.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents consumers in data breach and privacy matters and has experience investigating reported incidents involving sensitive personal and medical-related information.
- We review breach notices and regulatory filings closely to determine what is known and what remains unclear.
- We help affected individuals understand practical next steps and whether an investigation or claim may be worth pursuing.
- We communicate in plain language so you can make informed decisions without pressure.
If you received a notice related to this reported incident, fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC for a free, no-obligation review.
If you received a breach notification letter from Phoenix Environmental Laboratories:
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.










