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Banjo Quietly Rebranded Itself Following Report on Former CEO’s KKK Past

After OneZero’s investigation, Banjo became safeXai

Matt Stroud
OneZero
5 min readFeb 11, 2021

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Illustration by Julia Moburg for OneZero. Image source: Siam Pukkato/Getty Images

Last April, OneZero revealed the CEO of digital surveillance firm Banjo, Inc. was once tied to the KKK and involved in the drive-by shooting of a synagogue. In the aftermath, Banjo’s local and state contracts dried up, and CEO and founder Damien Patton was forced to resign.

But new evidence suggests that in the months following OneZero’s report, Banjo quietly rebranded as safeXai. Patton is still a minority shareholder in the company and an inventor of each of its patents.

Within days of OneZero’s report in April 2020, Utah’s department of public safety suspended a $20.7 million contract with Banjo, and Banjo, in turn, suspended all of its operations in Utah, pending a review by the state auditor. Patton resigned and Justin R. Lindsey, a former chief technology officer with the FBI, took over as CEO.

Then, on February 1, an independent commission convened by the auditor released recommendations for…

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Matt Stroud
Matt Stroud

Written by Matt Stroud

Matt Stroud is an investigative reporter and the author of Thin Blue Lie: The Failure of High Tech Policing. Email: stroudjournalism AT gmail

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