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Police in Spain have detained Jonathan Andic, the son of the late Mango fashion group founder Isak Andic, in connection with an ongoing investigation into his father’s death. Isak Andic died in December 2024 after falling more than 100 meters from a cliff during a family hiking trip near Barcelona. While initially treated as an accident, authorities in Catalonia have since shifted the probe to investigate the incident as a possible homicide.

A family spokesperson confirmed that Jonathan Andic—who currently serves as the vice-chairman of the board and previously worked in the company’s retail operations—is cooperating fully with investigators and maintains his innocence. The court handling the case noted last year that the investigation had not previously targeted any specific individual. The suspect remains in custody and is expected to testify before an investigating judge shortly, though the case details remain legally sealed.

Isak Andic, who moved from Istanbul to Catalonia in the 1960s, founded Mango in 1984 and built it into a global fashion powerhouse to rival retail giants like Zara. At the time of his death, he was serving as the company’s non-executive chairman with an estimated net worth of $4.5 billion. While Mango has declined to comment on the recent legal developments, the unlisted, Barcelona-based company recently reported annual sales of 3.8 billion euros ($4.41 billion) for 2025.

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Spanish police have arrested a 20-year-old man accused of hacking a hotel booking platform to reserve luxury rooms costing up to €1,000 per night for just one euro cent. The suspect was detained at a hotel in Madrid, where he allegedly accumulated more than €20,000 in unpaid stays. Authorities described the case as the first detected instance of this type of manipulation targeting a hotel payment validation system.

Investigators said the man altered the platform’s payment authorisation process through a cyberattack, enabling transactions to be approved after entering only €0.01 as the charge. The bookings initially appeared legitimate, with the irregularity only uncovered when the payment processor transferred the minimal amount to the hotel company. Police launched an inquiry after the suspicious activity was flagged by the travel website and completed their investigation within four days.

At the time of his arrest, the suspect was reportedly completing a four-night stay normally valued at €4,000. Authorities said he had also consumed minibar items and left additional bills unpaid. Spanish newspaper ABC reported that he had previously been arrested in the Canary Islands over a similar incident involving a luxury hotel. Police indicated that further bookings at other hotels may also be under investigation.

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