What We Know About the American Student Held in North Korea

Otto Warmbier, 21, has been sentenced to 15 years of hard labor.

Otto Warmbier, of Wyoming, Ohio, reportedly said in a tearful statement ahead of the trial in Pyongyang that he tried to steal the poster in exchange for a $10,000 used car.

"I have made the worst mistake of my life," the student said today.

Warmbier was visiting North Korea as part of a tourist group arranged by Young Pioneer Tours, a tour agency based in Xian, China. He was arrested on Jan. 2 at Pyongyang Sunan International Airport on the last day of a five-day tour.

Three weeks later, North Korea announced it was holding Warmbier for a “hostile act” against the state. In late February, in video Reuters says was provided by North Korea’s state news agency and could not be independently verified, Warmbier appeared before the media with a written statement. “I committed my crime,” he said, and asked for forgiveness. It is not known if Warmbier had delivered those statements under duress.

Warmbier said he tried to steal the poster in exchange for a $10,000 used car, the New York Times reported, citing information the North Korean state news media released late last month.

Then, earlier today, Warmbier was convicted of subversion in a one-hour trial and sentenced. The court held that he had committed a crime "pursuant to the U.S. government's hostile policy toward (the North), in a bid to impair the unity of its people after entering it as a tourist." It’s unclear what a sentence of hard labor means for Warmbier.

Warmbier is the latest American accused of “hostile acts” to be detained by North Korea. U.S. citizens who have been detained in North Korea in the past have "confessed" to their crimes in front of media reporters, only to recant those statements after their release.

Warmbier’s parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, said in a statement on Feb. 29 that they had been unable to speak with him since he was detained by North Korean police.

The University of Virginia released a statement today saying it is aware of the situation and has been in touch with Warmbier's family. The school said it did not have additional comment at this time.

"And now that Mr. Warmbier has gone through this criminal process we would urge the DPRK to pardon him and grant him special amnesty and immediate release on humanitarian grounds,” State Department Spokesman Mark Toner said today. He also reiterated that the department strongly advises against all travel to the communist country.