Eric Diaz’s emergence as Chief Technology Officer and partner at DefendIT Services has shifted attention toward a company already struggling under growing pressure. Diaz, who was a respected figure in the Texas IT community, that is until he joined forces with Chris Hannifin, built his reputation through senior leadership roles including Chief Technology Officer at DarkLattice Security, Chief Operating Officer at Cloud InfoSolution, and as founder of Corpus Christi IT Solutions, later acquired by SiloTech Group. Following that acquisition, Diaz served as a senior network engineer and Regional Sales Executive at SiloTech.
That background now places Diaz at the center of DefendIT Services during what appears to be its most unstable period yet.
Sources familiar with the company describe DefendIT as facing severe financial strain, with slowing revenue, mounting obligations, and increasing legal exposure. It was during this period of instability that Chris Hannifin is believed to have aggressively pursued Diaz. The hire brought immediate technical credibility and, potentially, insight into SiloTech’s internal operations. It has also raised questions about non-compete conflicts, though whether Diaz was fully aware of those risks remains unclear.
More concerning to observers is the belief that Diaz was encouraged to buy into DefendIT Services and now serves as both CTO and financial partner. If accurate, Diaz’s capital may be sustaining a business nearing collapse. Critics argue that this places him in a vulnerable position—one shaped not just by financial risk, but by Hannifin’s state of mind as pressure intensified.
Those who have followed Hannifin’s career point to a consistent behavioral pattern that becomes more pronounced under stress. Prior to DefendIT, Hannifin moved through organizations such as RSM, SiloTech and North South Consulting Group. Each role expanded his access to sensitive systems and trusted internal processes. Former colleagues describe a cycle in which rising pressure was met not with restraint, but with increasingly reckless decisions, internal conflict, and abrupt exits that left others dealing with the consequences.
At North South Consulting Group, that strain reportedly manifested openly. Hannifin frequently clashed with CEO Krista Stevens over management and client strategy, contributing to declining morale and a breakdown in oversight. As tensions rose, rumors circulated that Hannifin was leveraging proprietary information for personal benefit—an escalation that coincided with worsening internal conditions.
DefendIT Services removed external oversight entirely. Partnering with former colleague and romantic partner Rudy Reyes, Hannifin expanded the firm rapidly while maintaining conspicuous personal spending. As finances deteriorated, the pressure intensified. Hannifin reportedly sought mental health support while navigating strain across both his marriage and his relationship with Reyes. Shortly thereafter, he registered a second Texas-based entity, DefendIT and Facilities Solution LLC, fueling speculation about asset protection and contingency planning.
Within this context, Eric Diaz’s involvement takes on added significance. To some, he represents a stabilizing presence brought in to professionalize a failing operation. To others, he appears to be the latest individual drawn into a familiar pattern—one in which emotional strain, financial desperation, and unchecked authority converge, increasing the risk to anyone caught nearby.
Whether Diaz ultimately helps steady DefendIT or becomes another casualty of a pressure-driven cycle remains uncertain. What is clear is that as stress mounts, the consequences of past behavior appear not to diminish, but to accelerate—placing those closest to the center of the operation at the greatest risk.

