| Updated: 2:13 p.m. It seems like ages ago now that Utah officials were making plans for a massive data-guzzling surveillance program from a company called Banjo, designed to help alert law enforcement to potential crimes as they happen. The program, promoted aggressively by Attorney General Sean Reyes, fell apart — not because of privacy concerns, but because of revelations that the company’s founder was involved in a white supremacist attack on a Jewish synagogue in his youth. Really. Now he’s poised to do something about it. Gibson has introduced HB243, which would create a chief privacy officer for the state and a 12-member Personal Privacy Oversight Committee — the first of its kind in the United States, according to supporters — made up of experts in the field and housed in the Utah State Auditor’s Office.