By JULIE CARR SMYTH
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Vice President JD Vance’s memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” has a storied historical past as a New York Occasions bestseller, because the then-31-year-old’s introduction to the nation as a “Trump whisperer,” as a divisive topic amongst Appalachian students, and, finally, as a Ron Howard-directed film.
Its newest position? Secretly transporting medicine into an Ohio jail.
The ebook was certainly one of three gadgets whose pages 30-year-old Austin Siebert, of Maumee southwest of Toledo, has been convicted of spraying with narcotics after which transport to Grafton Correctional Establishment disguised as Amazon orders. The others had been a 2019 GRE Handbook and a separate piece of paper, in line with court docket paperwork.
On Nov. 18, U.S. District Decide Donald C. Nugent sentenced Siebert to greater than a decade in jail for his position within the drug trafficking scheme.
Siebert and an inmate on the jail had been caught in a recorded dialog discussing the cargo. He both didn’t know or didn’t care {that a} central theme of “Hillbilly Elegy” is the impacts of narcotics habit on Vance’s household and the broader tradition.
“Is it Hillbilly?” the inmate asks.
“I don’t know what you’re speaking about,” Siebert replies, momentarily confused. Then, abruptly remembering, he says, “Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. That’s the ebook, the ebook I’m studying. (Expletive) romance novel.”
