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Drugs sneaked into Ohio prison soaked into pages of ‘Hillbilly Elegy’

A man was sentenced to more than 10 years in federal prison for mailing narcotics-laced books to Grafton Correctional Institution

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AP Photo/Pat Sullivan

By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Vice President JD Vance’s memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” first gained national attention as a New York Times bestseller, later became a flashpoint in debates about Appalachian identity, and was adapted into a Ron Howard-directed movie.

Its latest role? Secretly transporting drugs into an Ohio prison.

The book was one of three items whose pages 30-year-old Austin Siebert, of Maumee southwest of Toledo, has been convicted of spraying with narcotics and then shipping to Grafton Correctional Institution disguised as Amazon orders. The others were a 2019 GRE Handbook and a separate piece of paper, according to court documents.

On Nov. 18, U.S. District Judge Donald C. Nugent sentenced Siebert to more than a decade in prison for his role in the drug trafficking scheme.

Siebert and an inmate at the prison were caught in a recorded conversation discussing the shipment. He either didn’t know or didn’t care that a central theme of “Hillbilly Elegy” is the impacts of narcotics addiction on Vance’s family and the broader culture.

“Is it Hillbilly?” the inmate asks.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Siebert replies, momentarily confused. Then, suddenly remembering, he says, “Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. That’s the book, the book I’m reading. (Expletive) romance novel.”

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