The Man Who Purchased a Prison

Cedar Valley News
April 14, 2026
The Man Who Purchased a Prison
By George Khan

Kerwin Pittman bought a prison last November.

Not as a developer. Not as an investor. He bought it because he knew what it was and what it could become.

At 18, he was sent to prison, convicted of conspiracy to commit murder. He served eleven and a half years. Nearly a thousand of those days were spent in solitary confinement. He was released in January 2018 with his family waiting, and the world moved on without him.

He started a nonprofit when he got home. He launched an anti-recidivism hotline. He built a mobile reentry center, a bus driving to people who need housing help, job placement, mental health resources—because sometimes the people who need help most cannot get to it. He worked alongside the Governor of North Carolina on a task force examining racial equity in the criminal justice system.

Then last November, he saw a real estate listing.

The former Wayne County Correctional Center in Goldsboro, North Carolina. Nineteen acres. Eighty thousand square feet. Closed since 2013. Sitting vacant for more than a decade.

He purchased it for $275,000. He is, by every account, the first formerly incarcerated person in United States history to purchase a prison.

The barbed wire is coming down. The bars are coming down. The signs reading “No inmates allowed past this point” are coming down. He is building private rooms instead of open dormitories. He is covering the windows designed so correctional officers could see into the bathrooms. He plans job training in trades. A six-month stabilization program for men coming home from prison with nowhere solid to land. Room for 300 at a time.

He calls it a Recidivism Reduction Campus. The blueprint, he says, is “from incarceration to ownership, from punishment to purpose.”

I want to say something plainly here. Pittman was convicted of a serious crime. He served his sentence. Whatever the circumstances of the night, he was eighteen, the court decided, and he lived inside the decision for more than a decade. No one should pretend otherwise, and Pittman does not.

But here is what I think about when I stand behind this counter.

April is Second Chance Month. Prison Fellowship, the country’s largest Christian nonprofit serving incarcerated people and their families, has been marking it since 2017, and this year marks 50 years of its ministry. Nearly one in three American adults has a criminal record. Of the people released from North Carolina state prisons in 2021, 44 percent were re-arrested within two years.

Kerwin Pittman looked at those numbers and decided not to accept them. He decided the place once holding him could be turned into the place that holds people up instead.

The question I keep returning to is not about Goldsboro. It is about here.

Every town has someone who made a mistake, served the time, and came back home. Sometimes their family was waiting. Sometimes, Cedar Valley gave them the chance to prove themselves. Sometimes it did not. Sometimes a door stayed closed, a job, a conversation, a seat at the table, and the person on the other side eventually stopped knocking.

Kerwin Pittman had family. He said so himself. He had a place to go and people who believed he was worth the trouble. Many of his friends did not.

I do not know who in Cedar Valley needs someone to believe in them right now. But I suspect you do.

A man purchased a prison and turned it into a second chance. Cedar Valley does not need to buy anything. It just needs to open a door.

Someone in Cedar Valley knows this story. A door opened when it did not have to. A second chance given or received. A person who came back and was allowed to prove themselves. The Cedar Valley News Facebook group is where the conversation continues. Come tell us. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, Kerwin Pittman is a real person, and the national events described are real.

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