First National Assets Data Breach Investigation

A regulatory filing associates First National Holdings, LLC dba First National Assets with a reported data incident. The public record reviewed so far is limited, but it indicates sensitive personal, financial, and health-related information may have been involved. If you received a notice or suspect your information was affected, you should review your accounts and credit promptly. You can also fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC and learn whether you may qualify for a claim.

First National Holdings, LLC dba First National Assets is listed as an Illinois financial services company. Publicly available details about this reported incident are limited, so many readers may still be looking for basic facts, what information may have been involved, and what steps to take next.

Key Facts at a Glance

  • Entity: First National Holdings, LLC dba First National Assets
  • Industry: Financial Services
  • Location: Illinois
  • Reported incident date: February 9, 2026, according to the structured filing data reviewed for this post
  • Public listing date: July 10, 2026
  • Reported affected population: 35,693
  • Information that may have been involved: Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, names, financial account numbers, and health records
  • Consumer notice date: Not publicly available in the materials reviewed
  • Regulatory context: State Attorney General filings were identified for Vermont and Texas

What Happened?

Public information remains limited. Based on the regulatory information reviewed, this matter was publicly listed on July 10, 2026, and an associated incident date of February 9, 2026 was reported. However, the retrieved Texas Attorney General webpage is a general data security report portal and does not display the company-specific narrative or notice language in the text available for review.

That means important details are not currently visible in the public materials we reviewed, including how the event reportedly occurred, when it was discovered, whether a third party was involved, and what services, if any, were offered to affected individuals. Until a full notice or more detailed filing is publicly accessible, readers should treat the available information as a regulatory report rather than a complete account.

What Information Was Exposed?

The filing data reviewed for this post indicates that the information potentially involved may have included names, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, financial account numbers, and health records. Because those categories can be used in different kinds of fraud or identity misuse, this is the type of incident that deserves prompt attention even when the public facts are still developing.

If your Social Security number or driver’s license number was involved, identity theft monitoring is especially important. If financial account information was involved, watch closely for unauthorized transactions. If health records were implicated, keep an eye out for unfamiliar medical bills, insurance activity, or provider communications.

What Should You Do Next?

  1. Read any notice you received carefully. Check what information the company says may have been involved, the date range listed, and whether any credit monitoring or identity protection was offered.
  2. Monitor your financial accounts and credit reports. Review bank, credit card, and loan activity for anything unfamiliar, and dispute suspicious transactions promptly.
  3. Consider a fraud alert or credit freeze. A fraud alert can add an extra verification step, while a credit freeze can help block new credit from being opened in your name.
  4. Document everything. Save letters, emails, screenshots, account statements, and notes of any time you spend dealing with the issue. Those records can be useful if problems appear later.
  5. Use official identity-theft resources if needed. If you spot misuse of your information, report it quickly and follow a formal recovery plan.
  6. Ask about your legal options. If you received notice of this reported incident or are seeing suspicious activity, you can fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC for a free case review.

Your Legal Rights

People affected by a reported data incident may have legal rights, but those rights depend on the facts of the event, the type of information involved, and the laws that apply. In some situations, individuals may seek relief for out-of-pocket losses, time spent addressing fraud risks, or failures to use reasonable safeguards or provide timely notice.

Because the public record here is still limited, it is too early to make broad conclusions about specific claims. Still, if sensitive information connected to you was reportedly involved, it is reasonable to ask whether the company had appropriate protections in place, whether notice was adequate, and whether any resulting harm can be documented.

Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?

Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents consumers in data-breach and privacy matters and understands how to investigate incidents involving Social Security numbers, financial data, and medical information. Our team works to identify what was reported, what protections may have been missing, and what practical next steps make sense for affected individuals.

If you have questions about this reported incident, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can review your situation, explain the general legal landscape in plain English, and help you understand whether you may have a claim. Contact us through the form on this page to learn more.

If you received a breach notification letter from First National Assets:

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.

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What can you do if you were impacted by a data breach?

If you were impacted by a data breach, you may consider taking the following steps to protect your personal information.

  1. Carefully review the breach notice and retain a copy;
  2. Enroll in any free credit monitoring services provided by the company;
  3. Change passwords and security questions for online accounts;
  4. Regularly review account statements for signs of fraud or unauthorized activity;
  5. Monitor credit reports for signs of identity theft; and
  6. Contact a credit bureau(s) to request a temporary fraud alert.

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Data Breach Website Blog Form

What can you do if you were impacted by a data breach?

If you were impacted by a data breach, you may consider taking the following steps to protect your personal information.

  1. Carefully review the breach notice and retain a copy;
  2. Enroll in any free credit monitoring services provided by the company;
  3. Change passwords and security questions for online accounts;
  4. Regularly review account statements for signs of fraud or unauthorized activity;
  5. Monitor credit reports for signs of identity theft; and
  6. Contact a credit bureau(s) to request a temporary fraud alert.

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Chicago, Illinois 60611

Phone: 872.263.1100
Toll Free: 866.748.6220

One Magnificent Mile
980 N Michigan Avenue, Suite 1610
Chicago, Illinois 60611

Phone: 872.263.1100
Toll Free: 866.748.6220

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