Jeffrey Burr Listed by anubis Ransomware Group
[www.jeffreyburr.com]
On June 5, 2026, the personal and professional website of Jeffrey Burr at www.jeffreyburr.com appeared on the leak site of the Anubis ransomware group. Internal files were exfiltrated during a ransomware attack, exposing data that could affect anyone whose information was stored in those systems, including clients, business contacts, and potentially their families.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting indicates that Anubis actors listed Jeffrey Burr’s domain on their leak portal after claiming to have stolen internal files. The primary source is the Anubis leak site itself, indexed by ransomware.live at the onion address referenced in incident trackers. No exact victim count has been published, and the precise volume or types of records remain unclear from available reporting. What is confirmed is that internal files were exfiltrated and the listing occurred on June 5, 2026.
The breach follows the typical ransomware pattern of data theft followed by public shaming when demands are not met. Because the affected system is a professional website tied to an individual’s name and practice, personal details that may have lived in those files are now at risk of wider circulation.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a professional site like this is breached, the information inside often includes names, addresses, phone numbers, email accounts, dates of birth, and financial or insurance records of real people. If your data was among the internal files, criminals can use it to impersonate you, open accounts, or sell it to others who will. Your family’s details can be swept up in the same leak if shared addresses, children’s names, or household phone numbers appear in the stolen documents.
Even if you have never heard of Jeffrey Burr, credential leaks and contact lists from professional breaches routinely cascade into broader exposure. A single exposed email and password combination from one service can unlock multiple accounts you use every day.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risk
Stolen internal files frequently contain more than isolated records. They can link email addresses to physical addresses, phone numbers to family members, and professional handles to personal social-media profiles. Once these connections surface on a ransomware leak site, other criminals quickly build on them, creating doxxing chains that expose your full online footprint. Gaming accounts belonging to you or your children are especially vulnerable because usernames and email addresses are often reused across both professional and entertainment platforms.
Available reporting describes how such leaks accelerate identity theft by giving attackers the exact road map they need to connect disparate pieces of your life. A password found in one file can lead to account takeovers that reveal even more personal data, turning a single breach into months of harassment or fraud.
Anubis Group Track Record
Public reporting attributes the Anubis ransomware group with emerging in late 2024. The group has targeted organizations across multiple sectors, listing victims on dedicated leak sites when ransom demands go unpaid. Their typical playbook involves initial access through phishing or exploited remote-desktop services, followed by exfiltration of sensitive files and deployment of ransomware to encrypt systems. Extortion then proceeds in two stages: first demanding payment to prevent publication, then threatening to release the data on their onion site if the deadline passes. Jeffrey Burr’s listing fits this established pattern.
What to do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, with no-subscription cleanup handled by the service.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next exposure is caught in hours rather than months.
- Rotate any password you used on www.jeffreyburr.com or related services anywhere it has been reused, and switch on 2FA through an authenticator app instead of text messages.
- Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts, which often chain back to the same addresses and emails.
- Let remediation specialists perform hands-on takedown requests across data brokers and leak sites so you do not have to negotiate with threat actors yourself.
The speed with which ransomware groups publish stolen data means ordinary families must act quickly and systematically. Starting with a DoxxScan gives you both immediate visibility into existing exposure and ongoing protection that includes identity-chain mapping and specialist remediation, including coverage for gaming accounts that attackers love to hijack. Taking these steps now limits how far this breach can reach into your life.
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