Mango founder's son posts €1M bail in father's death investigation

Isak Andic, 71-year-old Mango founder, died in a mountain fall in December 2024; his son Jonathan is now under criminal investigation as a suspect.
A son now caught between grief and criminal suspicion
Jonathan Andic faces investigation into his father's death while maintaining innocence and the family disputes the company's future.

Cinco meses após a morte de Isak Andic, fundador da Mango, em uma queda durante uma caminhada nas montanhas próximas a Barcelona, o que parecia um acidente passou a ser tratado como uma possível investigação criminal. Seu filho mais velho, Jonathan, único presente no momento da tragédia, foi interrogado pela polícia catalã e liberado mediante fiança de um milhão de euros. O caso lembra que a morte de um patriarca — especialmente de um homem que construiu um império e deixou para trás uma herança disputada — raramente permanece simples por muito tempo.

  • O que foi arquivado como acidente em montanha ressurgiu como investigação criminal após a polícia identificar contradições nas declarações de Jonathan Andic e evidências em seu telefone.
  • Jonathan, único presente na queda que matou seu pai aos 71 anos, passou horas sendo interrogado pela polícia catalã antes de sair do tribunal sem algemas, após pagar €1 milhão de fiança.
  • Uma disputa de herança entre a companheira de Isak e seus três filhos, além de tensões documentadas entre pai e filho, adicionam camadas de complexidade ao caso.
  • A família e a equipe jurídica de Jonathan afirmam categoricamente sua inocência, enquanto o processo corre sob sigilo judicial, impedindo a divulgação de detalhes.
  • A Mango, empresa avaliada entre as maiores do setor de moda global, atravessa uma transição de liderança com o CEO Toni Ruiz — primeiro executivo externo a receber participação acionária — agora à frente do grupo.

Em dezembro de 2024, Isak Andic, fundador da Mango e um dos homens mais ricos da Espanha, morreu ao cair de uma montanha próxima a Barcelona durante uma caminhada com seu filho mais velho, Jonathan. A morte foi inicialmente classificada como acidente. Cinco meses depois, a investigação foi reaberta.

Na manhã de 20 de maio de 2026, Jonathan passou horas sendo interrogado pela polícia catalã como suspeito. Ao final, saiu do tribunal sem ser preso, após pagar uma fiança de um milhão de euros. A reviravolta no caso se deve a contradições encontradas em seus depoimentos e a evidências extraídas de seu telefone — elementos que levaram as autoridades a retomar uma apuração que havia sido arquivada no início de 2025.

Entre as testemunhas ouvidas estava Estefanía Knuth, golfista profissional que esteve com Isak próximo ao momento do acidente. Ela relatou períodos de conflito entre pai e filho, sem, no entanto, fazer qualquer acusação direta. O pano de fundo financeiro é igualmente tenso: após a morte de Isak, seus três filhos e Knuth travaram uma disputa acirrada pela herança, chegando a um acordo preliminar após negociações complexas.

No plano corporativo, a Mango também vive uma transição. Jonathan ocupava a vice-presidência do conselho e chegou a liderar a empresa brevemente, antes de seu pai retomar o comando. Em dezembro de 2023, Isak transferiu pela primeira vez uma fatia da empresa — cinco por cento — a um executivo externo, Toni Ruiz, atual CEO do grupo.

A família de Jonathan e seus advogados sustentam sua inocência de forma absoluta. O caso segue sob sigilo judicial. O que resta visível é o retrato de uma empresa em transição, uma morte que parecia simples até deixar de ser, e um filho que agora enfrenta ao mesmo tempo o luto e a suspeita criminal.

On a December afternoon in 2024, Isak Andic, the 71-year-old founder of Mango, fell from a mountain near Barcelona while hiking with his oldest son, Jonathan. The death was ruled an accident. But five months later, the case reopened. On Tuesday, May 20th, Jonathan Andic walked out of a Barcelona courthouse without handcuffs, having just posted a million euros in bail to avoid preventive detention. He had spent hours that morning being questioned by Catalan police as a suspect in his father's death.

Andic built Mango from nothing into one of the world's largest fashion brands, competing on the same low-price, fast-trend model that made Inditex—owner of Zara—a global force. When he died, he was one of Spain's wealthiest men. His death initially seemed straightforward: a hiking accident in the mountains outside Barcelona. Jonathan, his eldest of three children, had been the only person with him.

But investigators found reasons to look closer. Police examined Jonathan's phone and discovered contradictory statements he had given during questioning. The judicial inquiry, which had been shelved in early 2025, was revived with new investigative angles. The court began collecting testimony from people close to the deceased businessman. One of those witnesses was Estefanía Knuth, a professional golfer who had been with Isak at the time of the accident. She told investigators that Isak and Jonathan had experienced periods of conflict, though she made no suggestion of foul play.

The financial stakes were substantial. After Isak's death, Knuth and his three sons entered into a bitter dispute over the inheritance. They eventually reached a preliminary settlement following complex negotiations, but the tensions were real and documented. Jonathan himself held the position of vice president on Mango's board of directors. He had briefly led the company in recent years before his father reclaimed the role. In December 2023, Isak had transferred five percent of the company to an outsider for the first time—Toni Ruiz, the CEO and his right hand, who now leads the group.

Jonathan's legal team and family members have maintained his absolute innocence. They stated flatly that no legitimate evidence exists or will be found against him. In October, Ruiz and the other executors of Isak's will published a statement defending the memory of "a visionary entrepreneur" and affirming Jonathan's innocence. The case now sits under judicial secrecy, meaning details cannot be publicly disclosed. What emerges is a portrait of a family business in transition, a sudden death that seemed simple until it didn't, and a son now caught between grief and criminal suspicion. The investigation continues.

Absolutely convinced of Jonathan Andic's innocence; no legitimate evidence exists or will be found against him
— Family sources
A visionary entrepreneur whose legacy and his son's innocence must be defended
— Toni Ruiz and executors of Isak Andic's will
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why would authorities reopen a case they'd already closed as accidental?

Model

Something in the evidence shifted their thinking. Contradictory statements from Jonathan, details from his phone—things that didn't add up on second look.

Inventor

What kind of contradictions are we talking about?

Model

The court hasn't released specifics because of the secrecy order. But investigators were thorough enough to bring him in for questioning, which suggests the inconsistencies were significant.

Inventor

The inheritance dispute—how much does that matter here?

Model

It's the thing nobody wants to say out loud. A billion-dollar company, three sons, a girlfriend, all fighting over what Isak left behind. That kind of pressure can make people look guilty even when they're not.

Inventor

Jonathan ran the company once. Did his father push him out?

Model

He did, actually. Jonathan led it briefly, then Isak took back control. That's the kind of family wound that doesn't heal quietly.

Inventor

So is this investigation real or is it just the system working through a messy family situation?

Model

Both, probably. The phone evidence and contradictory statements are real investigative leads. But whether they point to something criminal or just to a son who was confused and grieving—that's what the court has to determine now.

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