Dayton Daily News

Seized NK ship sought for Ohio native's death

- By Jim Mustian

The parents of Otto Warmbier have filed a claim for a seized North Korean cargo ship, seeking to collect on a multimilli­on-dollar judgment awarded in the Ohio college student’s death.

The Warmbiers filed court papers Wednesday in New York federal court saying they have a right to

the assets after North Korea failed to respond to a wrongful death claim that accused it of abducting Warmbier, who had traveled there for a guided tour ahead of a study abroad program in Hong Kong.

The Warmbiers say their son was tortured after being convicted of trying to steal a propaganda poster and imprisoned for months.

He suffered severe brain damage, but doctors were unable to determine was led to it. The 22-year-old Wyoming, Ohio, native died days after being returned to the U.S. in a vegetative state in 2017.

“The Warmbiers are committed to holding North Korea accountabl­e for the death of their son Otto, and will work tirelessly to seize North Korean assets wher- ever they may be found,” Ben Hatch, an attorney for the family, said in an emailed statement.

North Korea has rejected accusation­s by relatives that it tortured Warmbier and said he was provided “medi- cal treatments and care with all sincerity.”

President Donald Trump has condemned Warmbier’s treatment, but has said he did not believe North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, knew about it or would have allowed it to happen.

North Korea did not respond to the wrongful death lawsuit that accused it of detaining Warmbier at

the Pyongyang airport “in an attempt to extract var- ious concession­s from the United States government.”

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled last year that North Korea “more likely than not barbarical­ly tortured Otto to extract a false confession” and used his lengthy prison sentence as leverage to further its foreign policy objectives.

She ordered North Korea to pay $501 million for its “barbaric mistreatme­nt” of Warmbier, saying the student’s family “experience­d North Korea’s brutality firsthand.”

In the latest court filings, Warmbier’s parents claim a right to the North Korean cargo ship, which the U.S. seized in May because it was carrying coal in violation of U.N. sanctions.

The vessel, North Korea’s second-largest cargo ship, was first detained in April 2018 by Indonesia while transporti­ng a large amount of coal. The U.S. later announced it had seized the 17,061-ton carrier in a firstof-its kind enforcemen­t that came amid a tense moment in relations with North Korea.

 ?? JON CHOL JIN / AP ?? Otto Warmbier, detained in North Korea in 2016, died after returning to University of Cincinnati Medical Center in 2017.
JON CHOL JIN / AP Otto Warmbier, detained in North Korea in 2016, died after returning to University of Cincinnati Medical Center in 2017.

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