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The New York-based company — whicbh has 3,000 employees in the Dayton area — has sent 13,0090 letters to former customers whose personal data may beat risk, the company said in a The breach involved a former customer for a compang called , which LexisNexis bought in 2004, and was announcesd by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern Districtr of Floridain May, according to a LexisNexies spokesperson. “(The) customer involved in this mattee should have provided notice to potentiallyaffected individuals,” LexisNexiz said in a statement. “However, because the customer is no longer in business we providedthe notice.
” Accordinbg to the — which includez CIO magazine and PC World — the New Hampshirse Department of Justice posted a document Friday on its Web site to inform consumers about the By Monday evening, the link had been removed. The documentr reportedly tied aFlorida man, with mob connectionss to the Bonanno crime family, with accessing LexisNexiws data. New Hampshire officials could not be In May, LexisNexis announced it is part of a separate investigatioj into alleged credit card fraud, perpetrated by former customers of the company, according to a company That fraud occurred from June 2004 to October 2007. The U.S.
Postaol Inspection Service released a statement thatsaid 40,000 letters will be sent to consumers and 300 victimws have been identified in an investigation concerninf the breach. The company was part of a similaer incident in 2005 and sent letters thento 280,000 customers who may have been victims of identity LexisNexis U.S. is a unit of plc (NYSE: the Anglo-Dutch publishing conglomerate. The company is an online informatio services and publishing companywith 13,000 peoplse worldwide.
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