Otto Warmbier's parents want North Korea added to list of state sponsors of terrorism

The parents of Otto Warmbier want North Korea added to terrorist list.

The bipartisan group asks Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to consider "the totality of North Korea's actions -- including detainment, detention and treatment of Americans citizens," "continued weapons sales and the transfer of sensitive technologies to other state sponsors of terrorism," "a long record of violent and destabilizing acts domestically and internationally," and "its alleged assassination of Kim Jong-name" using a deadly nerve agent known as VX.

USA Today was first to report Warmbier's parents were making the push.

"We have received the letter, are reviewing it, and will respond," a State Department official told ABC News.

North Korea was previously listed as a state sponsor of terror, from January 1988 until 2008, when President George W. Bush removed them as part of an agreement to deal with their nuclear program that later failed.

Designation as a state sponsor of terrorism would result in sanctions, including "restrictions on U.S. foreign assistance; a ban on defense exports and sales; certain controls over exports of dual use items; and miscellaneous financial and other restrictions," according to the State Department website.

North Korea is already under very strict sanctions as passed by the United Nations Security Council last month after the country conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.

"This is the strongest set of sanctions that the Security Council has imposed," a U.S. official told ABC News at the time. "It represents yet another major step."

Otto Warmbier died in June just six days after he was evacuated from North Korea upon his release from prison. Warmbier's mother Cindy told Fox News last month that her son returned to the U.S. blind, deaf and "jerking violently" when taken off the plane.

Warmbier spent 17 months in captivity in North Korea. He had been convicted and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in January 2016 after he stole a propaganda poster.

Warmbier's parents met with Sen. John Cornyn, R.-Texas, on Wednesday, who tweeted a photo and said he supported designating the country as a state sponsor of terrorism.

ABC News' Conor Finnegan and Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.