×

Hacker says they compromised millions of confidential police tips held by US company

By Thomson Reuters Mar 18, 2026 | 3:13 PM

By Raphael Satter

WASHINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) – A hacker says they have broken into a U.S. platform for searching law enforcement hotline messages and ​compromised more than 8 million confidential tips.

In a ‌statement posted online, the hacker – who used the name “Internet Yiff Machine” – said they had broken into tip intelligence platform P3 Global Intel, an arm of safety company Navigate360, and stolen ‌93 ​gigabytes of data.

The FBI did not ⁠immediately respond to a ⁠request for comment. P3 did not respond to repeated comment requests. On its website, Navigate360 described itself as the “leading provider of innovative tips and leads ​solutions” for law enforcement, federal agencies, the military, and school safety initiatives. Yiff Machine, in their statement, ⁠used a profane anti-police slogan ⁠and warned the public, “Don’t do the ​dirty work for the pigs.”

In an email, the hacker said ​they took over one of P3’s customer accounts ‌via social engineering and then exploited a vulnerability to grab data.

Reuters could not immediately verify Yiff Machine’s claims, but the website Straight Arrow News, which first ⁠reported the breach, said it had corroborated the authenticity of some of the material by contacting tipsters whose details appeared ⁠in the ‌data. The transparency website Distributed Denial of ⁠Secrets – which archives material from hacks ​and leaks – ‌said it too had received a ​copy of ⁠the data and would make it available to “established journalists and researchers.”

In a statement, the site’s founder, Emma Best, said the data “provides excruciating detail” on a tip collection system that “seeks to make everyone an informant.”

(Reporting by Raphael SatterEditing ​by Rod Nickel)