Shiloh Hendricks is Nearing $1M after Calling a Black Kid the N-Word...What If She Didn't Get a Dime?
Kiandria Damone, an Atlanta-based coder, activist, and entrepreneur, saw the injustice and took immediate action. But rather than just posting or venting online, she turned to what she does best.
In February 2025, a video began circulating online of a young Black child being racially harassed by Shiloh Hendricks, a white woman who called him the N-word in a shocking and disturbing verbal attack. The internet reacted swiftly: condemnation, calls for justice, and public outrage.
But instead of accountability, something even more sinister emerged.
Shiloh Hendricks launched a fundraiser on GiveSendGo, casting herself as the victim and claiming her “safety” was at risk. Within days, she raised over $650,000, with a stretch goal of $1 million — effectively crowdfunding the cost of being racist.
Kiandria Damone Did Not Let That Stand
Kiandria Damone, an Atlanta-based coder, activist, and entrepreneur, saw the injustice and took immediate action. But rather than just posting or venting online, she turned to what she does best: digging through code to find the truth.
She analyzed the HTML and JavaScript on GiveSendGo’s backend and discovered that the fundraiser was originally being processed by Square (owned by Block, Inc.), a company with strict policies against hate-fueled or discriminatory fundraising.
Once the connection to Square was confirmed, Kiandria coordinated a mass reporting campaign, encouraging others to file complaints and overwhelm the system with documented violations. The pressure was enough to shut down Square’s support chat bot, and Block Inc.'s stock dropped more than 24% in the days that followed.
When the fundraiser attempted to quietly switch payment processing to Stripe in the middle of the night, Kiandria and her volunteer network of coders caught it immediately. They had been monitoring the source code in shifts, ready to take action.
The objective wasn’t just takedown — it was disruption.
“No money for her. No refunds for them. Just consequences. Their hate-fueled donations will remain in a digital graveyard,” Kiandria said.
Here’s what else Kiandria did:
Filed complaints with the FTC and CFPB
Encouraged others to do the same
Donated profits from her business, Femme Finds, to the family of the targeted child
Publicly demanded credit after white influencers used her research without attribution
Continued to call for a paper trail and corporate accountability
This wasn’t Kiandria’s first time either — she previously exposed digital sabotage against her own business and now uses her skills to fight digital hate.
How You Can Help Right Now
You don’t need to be a coder to take action:
✅ Report hate-funding campaigns directly to processors like Square and Stripe
✅ File complaints with the FTC and CFPB
✅ Support Kiandria’s work via femmefindsatl.com
✅ Tag and credit her when using her strategy — especially if you're sharing it online
This story isn’t just about one viral video, or one racist fundraiser. It’s about how racism is rewarded online, and how digital tools can shut it down.
When tech literacy meets moral clarity, we get people like Kiandria Damone — who don’t just fight back, they fight smart.
If they want to profit from hate, we’ll turn their platforms into digital graveyards.
If they want to fund racism, we’ll make it cost them.
Dream Big, Act Bigger.
Can’t wait to find what she actually spends it on
Darn, Mr Trump is right again! Folks have got too much doll money.