Miklós Gyöngyösi

From the Hungarian Wikipedia page

Miklós Gyöngyösi (Budapest, August 8, 1929 - Budapest, 26 June 1957) plumber, was the leader of Landler Jenő Street Resistance in the 1956 Revolution and was later sentenced to death.

He was born into a simple family of workers, lost his parents early in 1943 during a bombing. He worked briefly in his profession, and in 1951 he was sentenced to three months' imprisonment for a laborious job injury, theft and embezzlement. He was then released, but still in the same year he was sentenced to 6 years and 3 months. Once again he was released and was once again convicted, and again released in the summer of 1956.

During the 1956 Revolution, he joined the resistance. During the fighting after November 4, he was forced to become commander of his unit because of his courage, but the battle was forced to end on 8 November. He then joined the political resistance: he participated in the production of leaflets and the illegal tabloid Élünk.

On November 18, together with Ilona Tóth and Ferenc Gönczi, the accused was killed by Istvan Kollár, a member of the State Protection Authority. For this reason, Soviet soldiers were arrested during a raid, and together with their two partners were sentenced to death and executed by rope. The Metropolitan Court convicted Gyöngyös at the first instance stage of the murder of Tóth Ilona, ​​and in the final judgment the Supreme Court's National Council of Judges exacerbated the classification as an excuse for organizing.