[MEDUSA] – Ransomware Victim: Clackamas Community College

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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 MEDUSA Onion Dark Web Tor Blog page.

Ransomware group:
MEDUSA
Victim name:
CLACKAMAS COMMUNITY COLLEGE

AI Generated Summary of the Ransomware Leak Page

Clackamas Community College, a US-based education provider with 936 employees, is listed as a ransomware leak victim in a post dated October 29, 2025. The leak post frames the incident as a data-leak event and claims that approximately 1.21 terabytes of CCC data have been exfiltrated from its networks. The page indicates the presence of a claim URL, though the URL itself is not shown in the data provided here. Public text on the leak page appears to be gated behind a CAPTCHA barrier, with the visible excerpt consisting mainly of verification text rather than substantive breach details. There are no downloadable items, and no screenshots, images, or files are listed on the page according to the data. The description accompanying CCC’s entry outlines the college’s programs and community focus; the listed headquarters address in the data has been redacted for privacy.

From the metadata, there is no separate compromise date beyond the post date; October 29, 2025, is treated as the publication date for the leak. The page presents a data-leak scenario rather than an encryption event, indicated by the claim of 1.21 TB of exfiltrated data, though no ransom figure is provided in the supplied fields. The leak page shows no screenshots or image attachments and reports no downloads or visible files. The victim is identified as American and part of the Education sector. Given the presence of a claim URL without accessible content, defenders should treat this as a potential high-volume data-exfiltration incident and pursue standard incident-response steps, including verification of exposed data, assessment of data-handling controls, and monitoring for any follow-on data publications or extortion activity.

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