TLDR

Newly aired audio of Mango heir Jonathan Andic sobbing through a 999 call after his father Isak’s fatal mountain fall is colliding with a judge’s homicide suspicions and a fierce family-backed defense.

The tape drops viewers inside a dynasty in crisis, as a treasured brand, a guarded patriarch’s legacy, and a son’s future all hang in the balance.

Listeners hear 45-year-old Jonathan in raw distress, begging for help after his billionaire father, Mango founder Isak Andic, plunged into a ravine during a hike near the Colbato Caves in Spain’s Montserrat massif. In the nearly three-minute call, broadcast on Catalan radio, he cries to the dispatcher, repeating that his father has fallen and pleading for an ambulance.

Rescue helicopter at Montserrat near the ravine where Isak Andic fell.
Photo: Police studies showed the marks left on the ground where Isak Andic plunged to his death did not coincide with a simple slip – Daily Mail US

He struggles to answer basic questions about their exact location. At one point, the Mango heir wails that he cannot see his father and then adds that Isak is not responding. The operator tries to steady him, telling him not to worry and promising police, firefighters, and paramedics are on their way.

That anguished audio now sits beside a very different narrative in a 17-page legal document from investigating judge Raquel Nieto Galvan. She has named Jonathan a formal homicide suspect, while allowing him to remain free on 1 million euro bail. In her report, the judge cites what she calls a “bad relationship” between father and son, notes that Jonathan had previously scouted the mountain route, and references police analyses that say ground marks near the ravine do not match a simple accidental slip.

She also flags what investigators view as red flags: Jonathan’s admission of deleting data from a phone he later reported stolen, and references to his “obsession” with money. Her conclusion, as quoted in Spanish media, is that there are indications Isak’s death “may have been a non-accidental death” with “active and premeditated involvement” by his son. Jonathan has not been convicted of any crime and maintains his innocence.

Isak Andic with his son Jonathan in 2013.
Photo: Isak Andic and his son Jonathan Andic pictured in 2013 – Daily Mail US

In the court of public opinion, the competing scripts are stark. On one side stands a methodical judge, a forensic trail on a treacherous mountain, and a leaked text Jonathan allegedly sent in July 2024 that read, “I am not surprised you thought I was even capable of killing you.” His legal team insists the message is being wrenched from a longer therapy-related exchange and says its tone has been miscast.

On the other side, Jonathan has launched a reputational counteroffensive. Shortly after his arrest, he resigned as Mango’s vice president to focus on his defense, telling staff the accusation was “serious, unjust and unfounded.” He wrote that a “one-sided” public narrative had distorted reality and that dismantling it would require time and intense dedication.

His lawyers have since released video of Isak stumbling and falling months before the Montserrat hike, reportedly tied to a degenerative knee condition. Their argument is starkly simple: this was a tragic accident involving an aging, unsteady man, not a plot in the shadows of a mountain.

For Mango, the stakes are not confined to a courtroom. Isak, a self-made tycoon who shunned publicity for decades, built the Barcelona-based label into a global powerhouse with more than 14,000 employees and thousands of stores worldwide. His fortune, estimated at $4.5 billion, underwrote private planes, a 175-foot yacht, and grand plans that once included commissioning one of the world’s largest superyachts.

Now that carefully curated mystique is colliding with surveillance-style scrutiny. The same family name that signaled discreet European glamour is being spoken alongside words like homicide investigation, leaked texts, and forensic reports. The tape of a son crying out for his father has become Exhibit A in a broader battle over what really happened on that mountain, and over how a fashion empire preserves its story when real life refuses to stay on script.

How do you hear that 999 call, as proof of a son’s innocence or just one piece in a much larger puzzle? Share your thoughts on the Andic case, Mango’s future, and how far a family legacy can bend without breaking.

References

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