JD Vance’s Memoir Used to Smuggle Drugs into Ohio Prison
Vice President JD Vance’s memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” has had a tumultuous journey from being a New York Times bestseller to a divisive subject among scholars, and eventually becoming a movie directed by Ron Howard. However, its latest role is far from its literary origins.
Recently, the book played a role in a drug trafficking scheme at an Ohio prison. 30-year-old Austin Siebert, from Maumee, was convicted of spraying narcotics onto the pages of “Hillbilly Elegy” and two other items, disguising them as Amazon orders to be sent to Grafton Correctional Institution.
On November 18, US District Judge Donald C. Nugent sentenced Siebert to over a decade in prison for his involvement in the scheme.
During a recorded conversation, Siebert and an inmate at the prison were overheard discussing the shipment. The inmate asked, “Is it Hillbilly?” to which Siebert initially seemed confused before acknowledging it as the book he was reading, dismissing it as a romance novel.

It is ironic that narcotics, a central theme in Vance’s memoir, were used in such a way to smuggle drugs into a prison. The incident sheds light on the challenges and consequences of drug trafficking in correctional facilities.

