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high severity June 14, 2026 · scope unconfirmed

Silsbee Police Department Hit by Nightspire Ransomware

Nightspire ransomware group claimed the Silsbee Police Department (Texas) in a June 14 disclosure on ransomware leak sites. The attack is estimated to have occurred in late May 2026. Limited public details are available on data exfiltrated, but police department victims typically involve sensitive law enforcement records, court information, and personnel data.

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Silsbee Police Department Hit by Nightspire Ransomware
Data exposed:
  • law-enforcement-data

The Silsbee Police Department in Texas was listed on ransomware leak sites by the Nightspire group on June 14, 2026, following an attack believed to have taken place in late May. Public reporting indicates that the compromised material includes law-enforcement data, which can encompass personnel records, investigative files, court documents, and resident information collected during routine police work.

Confirmed details remain limited. Nightspire posted the claim on multiple ransomware leak sites, a common tactic used to pressure victims into payment. Available reporting describes the typical scope of such breaches at police departments as including names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver’s license details, and in some cases internal communications or witness statements. Exact volume of records and full list of exposed fields have not been publicly detailed by the department or the attackers.

This incident matters for you and your family because local police departments hold information on ordinary residents: traffic stops, domestic calls, background checks, incident reports, and victim statements. When that data leaves secure systems, it can appear on dark-web marketplaces within days. Criminals then combine it with other leaks to build complete profiles that enable identity theft, fraudulent loans taken in your name, or even physical stalking if addresses and family details surface together.

The doxxing and identity-chain implications are particularly serious. A single police-department breach rarely stays isolated. Attackers link an email from one record to a username on a gaming platform, a phone number from a traffic citation to an account on a people-search site, and a child’s name from a school-related report to a Roblox or Fortnite handle. These connections create long chains that let bad actors move from one compromised account to the next, escalating from data theft to full account takeovers, harassment, or extortion. Credential leaks like this one frequently cascade into gaming-account compromises that expose your family’s photos, chat logs, and linked payment methods.

What to do

  • Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your emails, phone numbers, usernames, and real-world identity so you can see the exposure chains created by this and earlier breaches.
  • Rotate any password you used on sites or services tied to the Silsbee Police Department or any Texas government portal, then replace it with a unique passphrase everywhere it has been reused.
  • Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms so the next leak that touches your household is flagged within hours rather than months.
  • Cover the entire household with DoxxScan family protection, which includes dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same address or parent email.
  • Let remediation specialists handle the takedown requests across data brokers and leak repositories while you focus on securing your accounts and talking with your family about safe online habits.

Every breach like the Silsbee Police Department incident shows that waiting for notifications leaves your family exposed longer than necessary. Taking deliberate steps now to understand your exposure and close the gaps gives you control instead of waiting to become the next easy target. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers that ongoing visibility through continuous monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, hands-on remediation by specialists, and full household coverage that includes children’s gaming accounts.

Source: https://www.ransomware.live/

Sources

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