Incident & Breach Response
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Security Operations
Crash Records and Driver Data Exposed in Texas Transportation Hack

Hackers stole nearly 300,000 crash reports containing sensitive personal information from the Texas Department of Transportation after gaining access to the agency’s systems through a compromised user account.
See Also: On Demand | Global Incident Response Report 2025
The agency said in a Friday press release that the account was used to access and download the trove of crash reports containing names, addresses, driver license, car insurance policy and license plate numbers, among other data. Notification was not legally required in this case, but the agency said it “has taken proactive steps to inform the public by sending letters to notify the impacted individuals.”
The letter sent to impacted individuals stated that the department ” identified unusual activity in the Crash Reporting Information
System” on May 12 originating from a compromised system account. The account was immediately disabled as the investigation remains ongoing, and the department said it was “implementing additional security measures to prevent this from happening in the future.”
The Texas Department of Transportation said additional security measures were being implemented “to prevent this from happening in the future,” but did not specify what specific actions were being taken to prevent further breaches. The department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The department is legally required to maintain its crash records information system, which contains data on the individuals and vehicles involved in crashes throughout the entire state. The department encouraged impacted individuals to file their taxes early to reduce the chances of others filing a return on their behalf and being aware “of any email or text messages related to crash information.”