On 23 January, a silent vigil attended by 3,000 people was held outside of Schöntal Park. On 24 January, a memorial service for the murdered boy was held at a mosque in
Frankfurt-
Gallus, as the mosque frequented by the boy's family was too small. Around 1,000 attendants came, including Frankfurt Mayor
Mike Josef. The boy's remains were buried in his ancestral home in Ait-Oubarkane, Morocco, with transport costs paid for by the Moroccan government. The service was preceded by a political rally in Aschaffenburg, headed by Thuringia
AfD leader
Björn Höcke and around seventy supporters. Höcke's speech, meant to commemorate the victims, was criticised as he incorrectly claimed that the murdered child was female and spent a significant portion of the speech talking about his
anti-immigrant views, pausing several times while talking, apparently expecting applause from onlookers. The city of Aschaffenburg and criminologists subsequently urged right-wingers to not instrumentalise the attack for political purposes. On 26 January, a public memorial service was held at Aschaffenburg's Stiftskirche, attended by a few thousand people, including
Minister of the Interior Nancy Faeser and Bavarian
Minister-President Markus Söder. An anti-immigration protest was held outside the church, alongside a
counter-protest, both numbering a few hundred attendants. On 5 April 2025, 30-year-old Somali national Ahmed Mohamed Odowaa, who had intervened when the two passersby were attacked and was one of three men who had chased down the perpetrator, was slated for deportation to Italy per the
Dublin Regulation. This had been planned since October 2024, but due to Odowaa's role as a witness in the murders, the deportation had been delayed. The order caused outrage online, as Odowaa previously had received praise for his actions by Minister-President Söder and awarded a Christopherus Medal. Within the day, a total of 45,000 signatures were gathered to protest the deportation, and on 7 April, Odowaa received an extended toleration status and approval for his requested work permit. On 22 May 2025, Odowaa wrote a letter published through
Main-Echo newspaper, thanking the public for their support. In the writings, Odowaa admitted that his pursuit of the perpetrator was motivated by self-preservation and that he struggled with anxiety and panic attacks since. In early December 2025, it was reported that Odowaa was again required to leave Germany by the
Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) for continued unemployment, noting that the work permit had been used once, but that no job was taken up by him.
Unterfranken authorities recommended a
voluntary return, with a deadline for 1 January 2026. The
Bavarian Ministry of the Interior also disclosed Odowaa's criminal history before he was publicly honored, consisting of two monetary fines for riding public transport without a ticket and , as well as an open case for
trespassing at an immigration office. Odowaa subsequently left his accommodations in
Würzburg on 11 December and left the country for France. He met with
Die Zeit reporters on 24 December in
Paris, where he was living homeless. According to Odowaa, he had feared that he would be deported to Somalia rather than Italy and was planning to return to
Rome by himself. In regards to the information published by Bavarian authorities, Odowaa pointed out that the work permit was only valid for a specific warehouse job, which rejected him as all positions were already taken and claimed that other job applications in both Aschaffenburg and Würzburg were unsuccessful.
Die Zeit and
Main-Echo found merit to the latter statements based on available documents from immigration authorities. Odowaa attributed most of the issues to a
language barrier and stated that he had only begun receiving German lessons in summer 2025, with further appointments being pushed back from December 2025 to March 2026. In January 2026, German police filed an arrest warrant for Odowaa for failure to report to BAMF to enforce the obligation to leave the country. If detained in Germany, he is to be placed in remand awaiting deportation. In August 2025, a 29-year-old policeman who had previously arrested Omarzai for an assault was charged with obstruction of justice. The prosecution alleged that he had failed his duties as the leading officer by not initiating criminal proceedings against Omarzai, who had been detained for injuring his girlfriend with a knife in August 2024. The officer's defence partially attributed his decision to the girlfriend's intoxication and a language barrier, also noting that by the next day, the woman had declined to press charges against Omarzai out of forgiveness. On 28 October 2025, the officer was sentenced to five months imprisonment, suspended to a three-year probation, as well as a €3,000 fine to be paid to a charity for victims of crimes. On the first anniversary of the stabbing in 2026, the city of Aschaffenburg announced that a memorial place was planned to be built within Schöntal Park. == See also ==