According to a police report, Isak Andic's mobile phone registered no movement before the fall, suggesting he was stationary. This finding weakens the possibility that the fall was due to inattention or distraction.
The investigation, part of a judicial case opened by the judge of Martorell against the founder's son, Jonathan Andic, who is accused of homicide, examines the son's statements and data extracted from the father's phone.
Forensic analysis of the mobile indicates that Isak Andic only used the phone at the beginning of his excursion in Montserrat, taking several photographs and recording a video at 12:17 PM on December 14, 2024. The images and geolocation place these actions at the start of the trail, on the steps near the Salnitre caves.
The eleven minutes between the last phone use and the moment of the fall (between 12:17 PM and 12:28 PM) are considered by the Mossos sufficient time to have covered the distance to the approximately 100-meter-high cliff.
Jonathan Andic's defense has argued that alleged contradictions in his statements do not constitute incriminating evidence and that his father's fall could have been accidental, due to an initial stumble followed by a slide into the void, according to an expert report submitted to the court.




