Kim Goodman was murdered on July 11, 1983.

BY MIKE FUHRMAN

The N.C. Parole Commission is again considering releasing the man who fatally stabbed Mooresville resident Kim Goodman at her home on July 11, 1983.

Brett A. Abrams, 55, was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted of second-degree murder in May of 1984. Although he was 14 years old at the time he committed the heinous crime, he was prosecuted and sentenced as an adult.

The Parole Commission notified Goodman’s family on April 15 that Abrams’ most recent bid for parole, which had been pending since May of 2022, had been denied.

However, commissioners began a new review of Abrams’ case last month. There is no timetable for a decision.

Peggy Goodman-Riley, Kim’s mother, said waiting 23 months for the Parole Commission’s April ruling was “challenging” for her family.

“We now wait for the Commission’s decision on the current review … and we continue our objective of fighting any possibility of parole for Abrams,” she said.

A South Iredell High School graduate, Kim was engaged to be married and hoped to be a dance teacher after finishing college.

Abrams, who stabbed Kim 17 times while she was sunbathing in her backyard in the Brookview community, has been up for parole numerous times since 1993.

In their ongoing opposition to his parole, Goodman-Riley and other family members have argued that Abrams will be a danger to the community if he is released.

Over the years, more than 100,000 people have signed petitions opposing his parole. Scores of Iredell County residents have also written letters to the Parole Commission urging them to keep Abrams locked up.

Abrams is currently serving his sentence at Orange Correctional Center in Hillsborough, a minimum-security prison. He has been granted work release.


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