QuesTrade Hacked (2.Viewing)


What's in it:

▪️ 186,515 investor records
▪️ Email addresses
▪️ First and last names
▪️ Home addresses (street, city, state, zip)
▪️ Phone numbers
▪️ Gender
▪️ Questrade.LeadCheck status
▪️ User type
Nice attempt to remove competition to the banks. But feel for those whose information has been leaked. Imagine the number of spam emails and calls they are going to receive.. unbelievable. :oops: :mad:


Screenshot 2026-05-01 at 2.37.42 PM.png
 
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Nice attempt to remove competition to the banks. But feel for those whose information has been leaked. Imagine the number of spam emails and calls they are going to receive.. unbelievable. :oops: :mad:

That's nothing compared to the Identity Theft that's going to hit these poor souls, such as receiving significant bills in the mail, especially in the growth industry of fraudulent vehicle sales, all of which are then immediately shipped off to the Middle East or Africa leaving the "buyer" with an absolute financial mess to deal with. In some cases, police have even arrested the innocent victim of identity theft, and banks and other institutions have launched legal cases against them to try and get back their money or property. It's nuts.

OPP seek suspect after alleged identity fraud used to buy luxury vehicle in B.C. | Globalnews.ca

Living in Canada right now it a very dangerous proposal and our country has quickly turned into a true haven for foreign organized crime, who naturally never get arrested. There are multiple operators in Montreal, who the police know their names, connections and all about them, and have filed charges against them, but these guys mysteriously remain free & clear and are still shipping stolen and fraudulently purchased cars overseas from their warehouses.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/stolen-cars-montreal-9.7151820

As of March 2026, Tshiyoyo, the exporter identified by police as having ties to stolen vehicles, has not been charged with a crime, despite police raiding his business’s warehouse in 2024 and finding stolen cars there slated for export alongside piles of mattresses.

He is identified in the police documents as “Albert,” a Congolese man who operated the mattress warehouse at 407 Lebeau Blvd. in 2024, employing workers to pack stolen vehicles into containers.

CBC News has learned that since the police raid, Tshiyoyo is still in business.

He is operating a mattress company called C&N Matelas express inc., (C&N mattresses). In business records, Tshiyoyo lists the professional address of the company as a U-Haul storage depot, but multiple sources confirmed to CBC that it is actively operating inside a warehouse at a different location in Saint-Laurent.
 
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