Johann Guntermann is the leader of the notorious far-left criminal organization Hammerbande, the man has been living illegally for years. Members of the gang brutally beat up several people in a series of attacks last February.

The Hungarian authorities are investigating the legal possibility of extraditing Johann Guntermann, the current leader of the notorious far-left criminal organization, the Hammerbande, who is suspected of having participated in the Budapest manhunt - this is revealed in the response of the Budapest Police Headquarters (BRFK) to our newspaper.

At the beginning of November, Guntermann was arrested by a unit of the Saxon Provincial Police (LKA) between Jena and Weimar. In September 2023, the federal prosecutor and the LKA set a ten thousand euro bounty on the head of Germany's most wanted far-left activist. According to the federal prosecutor's office, Guntermann was already the central figure of the Hammerbande in 2018, had been hiding since 2020, and was wanted for several brutal attacks in Germany.

A few days ago, a far-left activist of Albanian origin was also arrested in France, who may also have participated in the massacre in Budapest. In his case, the Hungarian authorities are also investigating the possibility of extradition.

Manhunt in the Hungarian capital

It is known that in the middle of February last year, foreign far-left radicals attacked eight passers-by at four points in Budapest, brutally beating them up and seriously injuring some of them.

The victims were randomly selected based on their military-style clothing. The "crime" of all of them was that they were wearing field-patterned clothes, black boots and jackets, but they were not part of the February 11 eruption day event, as their attackers assumed.

The Budapest Police Headquarters conducted criminal proceedings for the crime of violence and grievous bodily harm against a member of the community. The police recognized some of the attackers based on their clothing, who they then began to follow and finally caught them in the city center, in a taxi: a German man, a German and an Italian woman, Ilaria Salis. They had a plastic-covered hammer, rubber gloves lined with lead, a viper, and gas spray.

Charges have already been brought against several others, although Ilaria Salis has so far escaped prosecution due to her right to immunity from the EU.

Suspected pedophile in the shadow of antifa attacks

It is important to note that a Hungarian woman was also arrested in connection with the attacks last February. D. Krisztina, an activist of the far-left Szikra Movement, was a suspect for a while, but eventually it turned out that she did not participate in the manhunt, so the proceedings against her were dropped. Before that, however, the lady's house was searched, and pedophile content was found during the search. The investigators found almost three hundred recordings showing the rape of children under the age of twelve, including two or three-year-olds.

70,000 pornographic recordings were also stored on the confiscated data carriers, which apparently feature people under the age of eighteen. The police linked these recordings to Krisztina D.'s life partner. The man was summoned to the police, but he committed suicide before the suspect could be interrogated. The proceedings were eventually terminated due to the death. Incidentally, the investigation also investigated whether child pornography could have been filmed in D. Krisztiná's apartment, but no evidence of this was found, according to the police.

Hungarian Nation

Featured image: Antifa protest at Hammerband's "home", Leipzig (Source: https://twitter.com/DokumentationL)