György Budaházy to the PS: "They were able to keep me in until now with another criminal case against me under pressure from the Háttér Társaság"

After repeated arrests for more than half a year, there was a turning point in the Budaházy case a week ago. György Budaházy was released from prison, ending his arrest, so he was equipped with a tracker, but he was able to return home to his family. Here, in his family home, he received the staff of PestiSrácok.hu and gave an exclusive interview, in which he revealed, among other things, why and how they were able to keep him inside for months longer than his peers. He recalled the 2019 demonstration against the LGBTQ sensitization of children and those participating in education, from which he was suspected of group violence against a member of the community following the report of a member of the Háttér Társaság and strong pressure from the Soros organization. Strangely enough, just when the sentence was announced in the Hunnia case. The national radical also revealed to the PS what kept his spirit in him, why they could not break him in the last decade and a half.

The leader of the national resistance of the Gyurcsány period was sentenced to 17 years in prison by criminal judge György Ignácz in the repeated first-degree proceedings, and he cannot be released from it even with a discount.

There, then, in the courtroom, he ordered his arrest, along with several of his companions. However, the companions were released after a few weeks, easing their coercive measures. Although Budaházy and his lawyer appealed in vain, the court dismissed it at all levels, citing, among other things, that there is a risk of repeating the crime in his case.

However, something happened at the half-yearly review - even though there was no change in his case. Maybe he just got to a good judge, maybe the Good Lord is taking care of him, in any case, the same court that previously kept him, now canceled his arrest. All this happened just after György Budaházy went on a hunger strike in his final desperation; his relatives and supporters, several members of the Budaházy Committee for Justice joined his hunger strike in the Church of Homecoming and prayed together for him.

I don't want to fight for grace, I want to ask for it, because it is customary to ask for grace. On the other hand, I demand that my criminal proceedings be conducted fairly and according to the law, because I have the right to fair justice

György Budaházy told PestiSrácok.hu. In the report, the leader of the national resistance of the 2000s talks about the anomalies of the Hunnia trial, about why he thinks that the judge who condemned him has such an increased appearance of bias that it would have been essential to report a conflict of interest. And he also tells in detail about how, under what pressure, he was completely absurdly suspected of violence against a member of the community because of a peaceful demonstration where he did not even come into physical contact with anyone.

Source and full article: PS

Featured image: MTI/Zsolt Szigetváry