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Armed Men Threaten Woman in Andorra Home Invasion Seeking Missing Stepson

Three unidentified men held a woman at knifepoint in La Cortinada apartment while hunting her 19-year-old stepson, son of a late businessman with.

Synthesized from:
AltaveuDiari d'Andorra

Key Points

  • Three men threatened woman with sharp object in garage, forced her to attic, ransacked flat for absent 19-year-old stepson.
  • Stepson's late father, Spanish businessman in Andorra, had debts potentially from drug money laundering across multiple firms.
  • Suspects, possibly Eastern European professionals, fled via mountains; no arrests, building lacks cameras.
  • Probe examines woman's credibility and late father's corporate web; all hypotheses open.

Police in Andorra are investigating a reported intrusion at an apartment building in La Cortinada on Wednesday morning, where three unidentified men allegedly threatened a woman with a sharp object while searching for her 19-year-old stepson.

The incident began around 9:45am in the building's garage near the main road. According to the woman's complaint, one man approached her from behind as she arrived with her two-year-old daughter—fathered by her late husband but unrelated to the targeted youth—and pressed a pointed object, possibly a knife or tool, against her back. No visible weapons were confirmed, and no injuries occurred. The assailants forced her to the attic apartment, where two more men joined them. They ransacked the flat, targeting the stepson, who was not present. Two additional men reportedly waited outside.

The youth, son of the woman's late husband—a 52-year-old businessman from Murcia who died just over a year ago from a long-term illness—had previously lived in the attic with his father. The men had apparently searched for him earlier in Encamp without success. The father, who moved to Andorra before the pandemic after business ventures in Spain and Portugal faltered, was linked to companies in energy, IT, real estate, and more, including firms in Murcia, Valencia, Montferrer-Castellbò, and a Luxembourg investment fund. Registries in Spain still list him as active. Sources suggest he left significant debts, potentially hundreds of thousands of euros, possibly tied to money laundering from drug trafficking, though creditors may include Andorran residents.

Police responded with three patrols, a van, and GIPA intervention team members wearing bulletproof vests, securing part of the area. The suspects—described as professional and possibly from Eastern Europe—fled discreetly, likely via the mountains, before officers arrived. No witnesses saw them enter or leave, and the building lacks cameras.

The investigation, overseen by prosecutors, treats two complaints—one primary from the woman and stepson, another potentially linked—as preliminary. All hypotheses remain open, including the possibility that the woman, a Spanish-Colombian resident in her 30s-40s with her own business in Cambrils, exaggerated or fabricated elements. Officers are scrutinizing her background, family ties, prior incidents, and the late husband's complex corporate network amid local skepticism in La Cortinada. No arrests have been made, and details are limited.

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