Anubis ransomware group published alleged Publishers Clearing House (PCH) data on April 1, 2026, claiming exfiltration of financial records, tax documents, and sweepstakes winner information spanning decades of company operations. Publishers Clearing House has not issued public statements acknowledging ransomware attack, data theft, or systems compromise at time of reporting.
Publishers Clearing House filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 9, 2025 to phase out mail order and magazine businesses, with remaining assets acquired by ARB Interactive on June 30, 2025. The alleged breach contains data predating the bankruptcy filing and asset sale, raising questions about when unauthorized access occurred and whether the new owner inherited compromised systems.
Sweepstakes Winner Data and Elderly Victim Risk
Anubis claims the dataset contains sweepstakes winner information including contact details and prize amounts for individuals who participated in PCH sweepstakes over multiple decades. The group warns that many winners are elderly individuals representing a vulnerable demographic that malicious actors will likely target through scams impersonating PCH representatives.
The risk increased after ARB Interactive’s December 2025 decision to stop paying lifetime winnings owed to previous sweepstakes winners. AARP published warnings in March 2026 about fraudsters impersonating PCH to steal money from victims, and the alleged winner data exposure could enable more sophisticated social engineering attacks.
Corporate Records and Financial Documents
The published materials allegedly include corporate financial records, tax filings, audit reports, and operational documents from PCH’s pre bankruptcy operations. The aging of materials creates questions about whether this represents a recent breach, historical data aggregation, or disclosure of previously stolen information held by attackers for an extended period.
BreachNews has not independently verified document authenticity with PCH or ARB Interactive. The lack of company confirmation prevents definitive assessment of breach scope, timing, and current operational impact.
Bankruptcy Context and Notification Obligations
Data breach notification requirements become complex when a victim organization undergoes bankruptcy and asset sale. PCH bankruptcy estate may retain liability for breaches occurring before asset sale, while ARB Interactive faces obligations for unauthorized access discovered after acquisition even if initial compromise predated the transaction.
The elderly demographic of many PCH winners creates heightened regulatory scrutiny given vulnerable population status and elevated fraud risk. State data breach laws require notification when unauthorized parties access consumer personally identifiable information.
Anubis Ransomware Profile
Anubis ransomware operates as a financially motivated cybercriminal group targeting organizations for data theft extortion. The group maintains leak sites publishing victim data when extortion negotiations fail, following standard double extortion tactics where attackers threaten both operational disruption and reputational damage.
The PCH breach represents targeting of a company in financial distress following bankruptcy and asset sale, creating a scenario where organizational chaos during restructuring may have created security gaps enabling unauthorized access.
Exposed Data Types:
- Sweepstakes winner contact information and prize details
- Financial records and audit reports
- Tax documents and regulatory filings
- Corporate operational records
- Employee and contractor information
At this time, there is no independent verification of the breach or confirmation from the affected organization or acquiring company ARB Interactive.






