Ferenc Gönczi

From the Hungarian Wikipedia page

Francis Gönczi ( Budapest, 1931 . August 3 - Budapest, 1957 . June 26 ) driver, the 1956 freedom fighters.

In 1949 he entered the Hungarian Workers' Party, which until 1954 was a member. He worked in the Stalin city and participated in the editing of the Iron Works there. Later he became an associate of Néplap in Fejér County, then a member of the journalist association. From 1951 he completed military service, and he also completed a Petőfi training course. He became a cultural instructor in Cegléd and after he left the military, he began working as a machine gun again. He also took two jobs at a time to support his family. The demonstration of 23 October 1956 he was present and helped to bring a girl to the hospital who was injured at the radio. He joined the Volunteer Ambulance Service and, from October 26, he delivered the wounded with Ilona Tóth. He also went to the countryside for food, and on 4 November he was captured by Soviet soldiers in Szombathely. He was released and returned to Budapest on 13 November. He was not a part of the armed struggle but was involved in political resistance. She produced flyers at the Domonkos Street Auxiliary Hospital and helped spread them. He also worked as a purchaser of the auxiliary hospital until on November 19 and 20, there was a raid on the building. Then he left the institution and liveHe was assisting in the editing and reproduction of the illegitimate title "Unlawful" on 5 December 1956. He was prosecuted for harassment and murder, according to the accusation that Ilona Tóth and Miklós Gyöngyösi were murdered brutally by a worker sent to the Domonkos Street hospital, whom they believed to be ÁVH. They were afraid that they might be at risk for resistance in auxiliary hospital. The Kádár retaliation was intended to present the brutality of the revolution and the expulsion of revolutionary intellectuals. The court was not able to prove the murder, but based the accusation on admitting confessions. The victim's personality was not correct, and the chronology of the facts, as well as laboratory tests, refuted the circumstances of the accusations of confession. Brandstätter Jenőné dr. Ferenc Tóth's General Court Council, headed by Matild, sentenced Ferenc Gönczi to death at first instance. The Council of the Supreme Court of the Supreme Court, chaired by Zoltán Radó, has made this verdict legal, and aggravated the accusation of accusation for participation in an organization. Ferenc Gönczi was executed on June 26, 1957.