[BLACKSHRANTAC] – Ransomware Victim: TENAX Law Group PC

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NOTE: No files or stolen information are exfiltrated, downloaded, taken, hosted, seen, reposted, or disclosed by RedPacket Security. Any legal issues relating to the content should be directed at the attackers, not RedPacket Security. This blog is an editorial notice informing that a company has fallen victim to a ransomware attack. RedPacket Security is not affiliated with any ransomware threat actors or groups and will not host infringing content. The information on this page is automated and redacted whilst being scraped directly from the BLACKSHRANTAC Onion Dark Web Tor Blog page.

Ransomware group:
BLACKSHRANTAC
Victim name:
TENAX LAW GROUP PC

AI Generated Summary of the Ransomware Leak Page

On October 31, 2025, TENAX Law Group PC was identified as a ransomware leak victim in a post published to a leak site. The firm is described as a U.S.-based law practice operating in the Business Services sector, with practice areas that span business law, employment law, real estate, bankruptcy matters, and civil litigation. The leak page references a location associated with the firm, but the exact office address has been redacted for privacy. The post date is provided as 2025-10-31, and in the absence of a clearly stated compromise date, this date is treated as the post date of the leak. The page appears to blend narrative content with embedded code, suggesting it may be derived from or modeled after a professional service site rather than a standalone incident notification.

The post asserts that roughly 150GB of data was exfiltrated from TENAX Law Group PC’s network. It enumerates data categories related to business law, employment law, real estate and bankruptcy matters, and civil litigation, and it hints at additional data such as insurance documents that may be published in the future. The page emphasizes that the data is strictly protected and states that any publication or sale would be tied to the victim’s failure to fulfill obligations. A claim URL is indicated on the page, though no ransom amount is disclosed in the visible content. The leak page also features a gallery of 35 image attachments that appear to be screenshots or internal documents; these image assets are hosted on onion domains, consistent with a dark web hosting environment commonly used for data-leak postings.

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