Frederick Hutson Explained

Frederick Hutson is an American businessman and founder of Pigeonly, a technology company that enables people to search, find and communicate with an incarcerated loved one. Hutson launched and sold his first business at the age of 19 while on active duty in the United States Air Force.

Early life

Frederick Hutson grew up in Brooklyn, NY with a single mother and three siblings. He moved to St. Petersburg, Florida, where he attended Brandon High School.[1] He then served in the US Air Force[2] where he worked on jet engines at the Nellis Air Force Base as an electrician.[3] During his time in the Air Force he launched and ran several businesses, including a window-tinting business that made about $50,000 when he was 19.[2] He was honorably discharged in 2005 after the base began downsizing, and eventually turned his business efforts to sending marijuana through the parcel companies. The business netted approximately $500,000 annually. [4] Hutson was arrested by the DEA, and Hutson served a sentence of 51 months beginning in 2007 at the age of 23,[5] [6] [7] [8] The indictment was for shipping approximately 2 tons of marijuana,[2] accepting marijuana from Mexico and shipping it to Florida.[9] He was released in 2012 to a half-way house.

Pigeonly

While in prison Hutson encountered the difficulty that American inmates have with communicating with their family and friends outside of the institution and developed an idea for delivering communications for individuals residing in prison.[10] [11] After leaving prison he founded a company, Pigeonly, which prints out electronic communications for prisoners and mails them through the postal system to them in order to be better accepted by the prison system. His business venture was accepted in the incubators Y Combinator[12] and NewMe.[13] [9] [14] The enterprise was cofounded in 2013 with Alfonzo Brooks, whom had employed Hutson during his final year in prison when Hutson was admitted to a work-release program. Hutson currently serves as the company’s CEO.[15] By 2015 the company had forwarded around a million pieces of mail and facilitated about eight million minutes of telephone calls.[16]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Idea man's latest inspiration: prison. 21 April 2013. Tampa Bay Times.
  2. Web site: Pigeon.ly, A Startup Focused On Serving The U.S. Prison Population, Joins Y Combinator . TechCrunch. techcrunch.com. 24 March 2015 .
  3. Web site: The brainchild of a former federal inmate, Pigeonly is a 21st-century lifeline. 18 December 2014 . Las Vegas Weekly.
  4. Web site: White House: Close the Opportunity Gap, the Whole Country Gets Richer. Matt. Vasilogambros. 14 July 2015 . The Atlantic.
  5. Web site: How This Man Built A $3M Business A Year After Four Years In Prison. Hollie. Slade. .
  6. Web site: Released From Prison, and Starting a Company. 7 November 2013. The New York Times.
  7. Web site: Pigeonly's CEO helps prison inmates. USA Today.
  8. Web site: 9 Arrested In Interstate Drug Ring Case. 11 October 2007. Tampa Bay Times.
  9. Web site: How an Ex-Con Went from Inmate to Entrepreneur. 28 June 2015. Success Magazine.
  10. Web site: Episode 610: The Prisoner's Solution. NPR.
  11. Web site: Ex-Con Creates Tech Company To Help Inmates Stay In Touch With Families. 2 April 2015. The Huffington Post.
  12. Web site: Pigeon.ly, A Startup Focused On Serving The U.S. Prison Population, Joins Y Combinator . TechCrunch. techcrunch.com. 24 March 2015 .
  13. Web site: From Prison to Silicon Valley: How One Entrepreneur Spun a Jail Sentence Into a Y-Combinator Backed Startup. Laura. Entis. 10 April 2015.
  14. Web site: Ex-con launches startup aimed at inmates. Sarah. Stankorb. 17 September 2014 . CNN.
  15. Web site: SUCCESS STORY: PIGEONLY – Frederick Hutson – Industry Leaders Magazine. 9 August 2016. Industry Leader Magazine.
  16. Web site: Four people who turned prison stints into businesses. Isabelle. Niu. 7 September 2015 . Splinter News.