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Mourners remember U.S. student held prisoner by North Korea

Thousands of friends and family members gathered in suburban Cincinnati on Thursday to say goodbye to an American student who died days after returning to the United States in a coma following 17 months in captivity in North Korea.

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Thousands of friends and family members gathered in suburban Cincinnati on Thursday to say goodbye to an American student who died days after returning to the United States in a coma following 17 months in captivity in North Korea.

Otto Warmbier, 22, was arrested in the reclusive communist country while visiting as a tourist. He was brought back to the United States last week with brain damage, in what doctors described as state of "unresponsive wakefulness," and died on Monday.

Some 2,500 mourners attended a Thursday morning memorial at Wyoming High School in the Cincinnati suburb of Wyoming. Warmbier, who graduated from the school as salutatorian in 2013, will be buried at a local cemetery later in the day.

The exact cause of his death is unclear. Officials at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where he was treated, declined to provide details, and Warmbier's family asked the Hamilton County Coroner on Tuesday not to perform an autopsy.

Warmbier's brother and sister spoke at Thursday's memorial, as did a number of his friends, said attendee Fred Koss.

"I had to come out to support the family, and also just to show, in my opinion, the North Korean government that we are a dignified country, unlike them," said Koss a 70-year-old Wyoming resident.

A program for the memorial carried a quote from Andy Bernard, a character on the television show "The Office": "I wish there was a way to know you're in the good old days before you've actually left them."

Warmbier was scheduled to graduate this year from the University of Virginia's McIntire School of Commerce.

"He was able to connect with grownups and children, and he was one of those people that made you feel like you were his best friend, even though you had just met him," said his college counselor, Cynthia Meis, who attended the service.

"He was genuine and authentic, and so smart."

Warmbier was traveling in North Korea with a tour group. He was arrested at Pyongyang airport as he was about to leave.

He was sentenced two months later to 15 years of hard labor for trying to steal an item bearing a propaganda slogan from his hotel, North Korea state media said.

Warmbier's treatment was "appalling," U.S. Senator Rob Portman of Ohio told reporters outside the memorial.

North Korean officials told U.S. envoys that Warmbier contracted botulism after his trial and lapsed into a coma after taking a sleeping pill. The family disbelieves that account.

Warmbier's death has only heightened tensions aggravated by dozens of North Korean missile launches and two nuclear bomb tests since last year.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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