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Madison Square Garden Worker Drops Lawsuit Over Oracle Data Breach
Plaintiff cites lack of evidence of actual harm from the data exposure incident.
Published on Mar. 9, 2026
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A former Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. employee has voluntarily dismissed his proposed class action lawsuit alleging the company negligently failed to protect the personal information of approximately 130,000 current and former workers that was exposed in a recent data breach. The plaintiff, Angel Liranzo, filed the lawsuit two days prior but has now withdrawn the case, citing a lack of evidence of actual harm from the data exposure incident.
Why it matters
Data breaches and subsequent lawsuits can pose significant legal and financial risks for companies, so the voluntary dismissal of this case may indicate a lack of substantive evidence of damages that would have made the lawsuit viable. The outcome highlights the challenges plaintiffs can face in proving harm from data exposure incidents, even when large numbers of individuals are affected.
The details
Liranzo had alleged the breach of employee names and Social Security numbers was the result of a targeted attack upon Oracle Corp.'s E-Business Suite software used by Madison Square Garden Entertainment. However, the plaintiff has now decided to voluntarily dismiss the case, suggesting insufficient evidence to support the claims of negligence and harm.
- The data breach at Madison Square Garden Entertainment occurred in late 2025.
- Liranzo filed the proposed class action lawsuit on March 4, 2026.
- Liranzo filed a notice of voluntary dismissal on March 6, 2026, just two days after initiating the lawsuit.
The players
Angel Liranzo
A former employee of Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. who filed a proposed class action lawsuit over a data breach at the company.
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp.
The entertainment company that allegedly failed to protect the personal information of approximately 130,000 current and former workers in a data breach.
Oracle Corp.
The software company whose E-Business Suite product was allegedly targeted in the data breach affecting Madison Square Garden Entertainment.
The takeaway
This case highlights the challenges plaintiffs can face in proving actual harm from data breaches, even when large numbers of individuals are affected. The voluntary dismissal suggests a lack of substantive evidence to support the claims, underscoring the high bar for establishing negligence and damages in such lawsuits.
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