Wisner Baum Responds to Cybersecurity Incident and Subsequent Litigation
Cybersecurity incidents are escalating across every sector, and a clear trend is taking hold: litigation follows public disclosure more often than root-cause accountability.
The investigation pinpointed the source, site, and extent of the exposure, and on January 21st, 2026,
Layers of Exposure
The incident reflects a broader structural issue: organizations are relying on security infrastructure that, despite being marketed as state-of-the-art, can still leave them open to attack due to exploitable vulnerabilities. According to governmental and industry data, thousands of organizations report similar data-security incidents each year, often tied to vulnerabilities in third-party software, hardware, or managed services — not internal misconduct.
Meanwhile, legal and regulatory experts report a growing pattern: required disclosures increasingly become the focal point for follow-on litigation. Even as cybersecurity professionals emphasize that transparency and prompt notification are central to responsible incident response, some treat these notifications as a litigation opportunity against businesses who have taken all reasonable steps to comply with evolving legal and ethical obligations.
"It is unfortunate that some law firms are attempting to exploit this situation for their own gain. A professional cybercriminal was able to access
"We are dealing with lawyers and their clients who, instead of going after the threat actors or the SonicWall system that left us exposed, are trying to exact even more money and time from
Standing on the Record
Recent cases show that breach notifications can become a litigation flashpoint, creating additional downstream risk. Data from Duane Morris indicates that 1,488 class actions were filed over data breaches in 2024 — an increase of approximately 13% from 2023 (1,320 filings) and more than double the 604 filings in 2022 — underscoring the scale and accelerating frequency of breach-related litigation.
"This type of litigation discourages timely disclosure, shifting focus away from systemic infrastructure accountability, and increasing friction for organizations like ours that are following best-practice notification standards to the letter," Wisner said.
The firm remains focused on its longstanding mission: representing consumers harmed by systemic failures, holding powerful institutions accountable, and advancing public interest litigation nationwide.
About
Sources
- The Daily Journal. (2026, February 5).
Wisner Baum calls client data breach suits "meritless," "frivolous". - The Recorder. (2026, February 2). Los Angeles plaintiffs firm
Wisner Baum sued over data incident. (Law.com / The Recorder). - Westlaw Today. (2026,
February 4 ). Data breach at Wisner Baum law firm draws suit. - Whittaker, Z. (2026,
January 29 ). Fintech firm Marquis blames hack at firewall provider SonicWall for its data breach. TechCrunch. - Office of Management and Budget (OMB). (2024). ANNUAL REPORT FISCAL YEAR 2023. bidenwhitehouse.archives.
- FBI National Press Office. (2025,
April 23 ). FBI releases annual internet crime report Federal Bureau of Investigation. - AdvisorHub. (2025,
April 15 ). LPL sues Ameriprise for sending clients misleading data breach notices. - Duane Morris LLP. (2025). Data Breach Class Action Review – 2025. FlippingBook. online.flippingbook.com/view/759158897/10/
Media Inquiries
Karla Jo Helms
JOTO PR
727-777-4629
jotopr.com
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