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Otto Warmbier testifying in North Korea in 2016. Photo: AFP

Otto Warmbier’s family seeks US$1 billion in damages from North Korea, holding regime liable for torturing and killing him

  • Warmbier visited North Korea as a tourist on his way to a study-abroad programme but was arrested and imprisoned in 2016 for 15 years for stealing a propaganda sign
  • He died days after his return in June 2017, with severe brain damage and no awareness of his surroundings. Doctors said he had been in a coma for more than a year
North Korea

Greta Warmbier climbed the stairs onto the plane in summer 2017 ecstatic, thinking it was the happiest moment of her life: Her beloved brother Otto had come home, back in Ohio, freed from nearly 18 months of imprisonment in North Korea. She had so many things to tell him: her braces had come off, she’d had her first boyfriend, she was starting to think about where to apply to college.

Then, over the roaring engine of the medical transport plane, she heard horrible sounds – screaming, crying, moaning. She saw her brother, strapped down because of his involuntary flailing, a tube in his nose, eyes bulging, and he was howling as though in terrible pain. She ran off the plane screaming. Her mother, Cindy Warmbier, fell onto the tarmac, sobbing and dizzy from the shock.

In searing, emotional testimony on Wednesday in federal court, the Warmbier family made their case against North Korea, and asked the judge to find the regime liable for taking 21-year-old Otto Warmbier hostage, torturing and killing him.

Fred and Cindy Warmbier and Otto Warmbier’s estate seek more than US$1 billion in damages from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. The Trump administration placed North Korea on the state-sponsors-of-terrorism list in November 2017, which made the Warmbiers’ extraordinary lawsuit possible.

After so many months of helplessness and forced silence – with no contact with their son, and with State Department officials warning them that a chance remark could provoke retaliation against the prisoner – Wednesday was a day for them to speak out and demand justice.

“We’re here because we don’t fear North Korea any more,” Fred Warmbier said. They have already done the worst they can do, he said.

I’m here to ask the United States of America and this court to do justice for Otto
Fred Warmbier, father

Their testimony told how Otto Warmbier, a charismatic, athletic, hard-working and intellectually curious University of Virginia student, had visited North Korea as a tourist on his way to a study-abroad programme and was not allowed to leave until US officials learned he was in a coma and demanded his release. He died days after his return in June 2017, with severe brain damage and no awareness of his surroundings. Doctors said he had been in a coma for more than a year.

In the courtroom, family and friends from Ohio and the University of Virginia sobbed as they listened to the Warmbiers relive the ordeal, from the first moment of uneasiness in January 2016 when they hadn’t received an expected phone call from their son after his visit to North Korea, to months of agonising silence amid escalating tensions between the United States and the authoritarian state.

The family’s lawyers said that Warmbier was used as a pawn in a high-stakes geopolitical fight, and that his seizure, forced confession and sham conviction coincided with provocations such as nuclear testing by North Korea and responses from the United States, including imposition of economic sanctions.

Chief Judge Beryl Howell of the US District Court for the District of Columbia did not rule on Wednesday, but asked questions of the Warmbier family and of experts. Those specialists testified about torture in North Korea and how many of the methods leave no lasting trace. The experts said they believe Warmbier was tortured for political ends.

Fred Warmbier, father of Otto Warmbier. Photo: AFP

Howell asked one scholar whether North Korea paid attention to such court cases, and he responded that they were closely watched – and that without a substantial financial deterrent, in his opinion the country would continue its pattern of seizing hostages.

North Korea has not responded to the lawsuit, and was deemed legally in default by the court this year.

A North Korean official said at the time of Warmbier’s death that claims of torture were baseless slander.

Otto Warmbier’s tragic journey to North Korea and back

The coroner in Hamilton County, Ohio, who examined Warmbier after his family made the decision to discontinue medical interventions that were keeping him alive, said she could not determine what caused the initial lack of oxygen to his brain or a four-inch scar on his foot.

A neurologist who examined Warmbier when he returned to the US concluded he died because of a brain injury suffered more than a year before his return, and that blood flow must have stopped to the brain or been significantly reduced for five to 20 minutes. The brain injury was not the result of natural causes, and Warmbier had not had botulism as the North Koreans said.

Two dentists submitted declarations that two of Warmbier’s lower front teeth, which had been straight and healthy, were significantly pushed in toward the back of his mouth at the time of his death.

Fred Warmbier made his son a promise when he died, he said on Wednesday: “I’m here to ask the United States of America and this court to do justice for Otto.”

How North Korea’s hostage playbook backfired with Otto Warmbier

Otto Warmbier’s parents and siblings shared family photos as they told the court about the sweet, curious little boy who grew into a studious, driven, athletic and often goofy young man who loved to laugh. He was a blessing to his mother, who got pregnant at 35 after battling cancer. He was the impossible-to-live-up-to older brother, but was kindhearted and lots of fun, his siblings said; so magnetic that his younger sister would try to follow him on his five-mile runs, just to be with him, or curl up in the corner of the sofa where he always studied, just to feel that warmth.

He was the one who planned a surprise climbing trip, the one who promised to come get Greta from choir camp when she was homesick, and the one who turned to Austin Warmbier on his 15th birthday and suggested, conspiratorially, that his car-obsessed little brother drive them to school that day.

He talked to his parents a few times a week from U-Va., always ending calls with, “I love you.” He was planning to work on Wall Street after graduation, and wanted to travel while he could in college before launching into 80-hour workweeks.

North Korean hospital boss rejects Otto Warmbier torture charges

His lawyers showed video released from North Korea in 2016 in which Otto Warmbier “confessed” and was sentenced to 15 years of hard labour. Fred Warmbier looked down, and Cindy Warmbier turned her back on the screen as their son’s voice filled the courtroom, pleading for his life.

Young men – his close friends, now graduated from college, who had driven and flown in from across the country for the hearing – wiped away tears.

Otto Warmbier escorted at the Supreme Court in Pyongyang, North Korea. Photo: AP

When the video was released, Cindy Warmbier said, she went to her bedroom and curled up in a ball.

She often tried to imagine what he was thinking over those long months, trying to feel closer to him by looking up the weather in North Korea, checking the time, thinking what it would be like to hear only a foreign language all the time.

“I tried to do anything to connect myself with Otto,” she said.

How Otto Warmbier’s death in 2017 put hard partying North Korean tour groups in spotlight

But as time went on, she felt a void rather than closeness: “I didn’t feel anything.”

When a State Department official called Fred Warmbier late one night and told him his son was in a coma, he felt crazy and frightened, he said. But the family, trying to stay positive, thought of Otto as asleep, perhaps in a medically induced coma from which he would awaken in a matter of days.

Then, on the plane, Fred Warmbier said, he saw his 6-foot-2-inch, 180-pound, good-looking son on the plane jerking violently, head shaved, howling, unresponsive. That he was wearing a U-Va. T-shirt only made it worse.

“Our beautiful boy,” Cindy Warmbier said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: grieving u.s. family seeks US$1b in legal bid
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