A comprehensive look at the multiple failures leading to the tragic New Year's Eve fire, from the criminal investigation into the owners to admitted lapses in official safety inspections and the broader questions being raised about fire safety regulations for public venues in Switzerland.

"The first thing surprising many people is that the managers have not been arrested."
"Periodic inspections were not conducted between 2020 and 2025. We bitterly regret this."
Forty lives have been extinguished in what is now one of the deadliest tragedies in modern Swiss history. As the smoke clears from the basement of Le Constellation in Crans-Montana, a nation grapples with a staggering loss: the average age of the victims was just 19. The inferno, ignited by sparklers on champagne bottles that set the ceiling's acoustic foam ablaze, turned a New Year's celebration into a death trap within seconds.
Beyond the heartbreaking death toll, 116 people were wounded, with 83 survivors still fighting for recovery in hospitals across the region. The sheer scale of this disaster has triggered a National Day of Mourning, yet grief is rapidly turning to anger. While French President Emmanuel Macron prepares to join mourners at a memorial in Martigny, the question on every lip is not just how this happened, but why it was allowed to happen. The devastation is absolute, leaving a scar on the Valais canton that will take generations to heal.
In a move that has baffled legal experts and enraged victims' families, the owners of Le Constellation remain free. Despite facing charges of manslaughter by negligence, bodily harm, and arson, Jacques and Jessica Moretti have not been placed in pre-trial detention. Alain Macaluso, Director of the Centre for Criminal Law at the University of Lausanne, slammed the decision, citing "serious concerns" about the investigation's integrity.
"The first few hours are crucial... detention allows investigations to take place without interference," Macaluso asserted, highlighting the acute risk of collusion. The failure to immediately search the managers' homes and municipal offices is a glaring procedural anomaly. While the Valais prosecutor's office insists that travel bans are unnecessary, the leniency shown stands in stark contrast to the devastation caused. If evidence emerges that the owners knew of the foam's danger—as suggested by a 2019 video of a waiter warning staff—charges could escalate to intentional manslaughter, carrying a potential 20-year sentence. The justice system is now under a microscope, with transparency demanded as an absolute necessity.
A staggering five-year void in safety protocols has been exposed, implicating the very authorities tasked with public protection. Crans-Montana Mayor Nicolas Feraud admitted to a catastrophic failure: no fire safety inspections were conducted at Le Constellation between 2020 and 2025. This is a direct violation of laws requiring annual checks for public venues. "We bitterly regret this," Feraud stated, a confession that offers little solace to the bereaved families.
The negligence runs deeper than missed appointments. The deadly soundproofing foam had been installed during 2015 renovations that the municipality claims "did not require a permit." Yet, the danger was hiding in plain sight for a decade. While the municipality cannot be criminally prosecuted as an entity, individual officials now face potential liability. The admission has triggered a frantic response, with the council now scrambling to commission external agencies to inspect all public establishments. It is a reactive measure that comes tragically too late.
As the smoke clears, a troubling portrait of the bar's management is emerging. Jacques Moretti, who co-managed the venue with his wife, is no stranger to the judicial system. Reports confirm that Moretti has a criminal past in France, including a conviction for pimping and a ban on running businesses in his home country.
While the couple's lawyers have issued statements pledging full cooperation and asserting they will not "shirk responsibilities," Moretti's background raises critical questions about the vetting process for business owners in the Swiss hospitality sector. How was an individual with such a record allowed to operate a venue packed with teenagers? The couple remains free, neither remanded in custody nor under house arrest, a fact that fuels the growing public outcry. The investigation must now determine if this pattern of disregard for the law extended to the safety of the 100 patrons crammed into that basement on New Year's Eve.
Half of the victims were minors, with the youngest just 14 years old. This horrific statistic exposes a gaping hole in Swiss regulatory enforcement. In Valais, the law mandates that anyone under 16 must be accompanied by an adult after 10 p.m., yet teenagers were packed into Le Constellation well past midnight.
Reports suggest a complete breakdown of access control. Witnesses have described a side entrance with a PIN code automatic door, allowing patrons to bypass ID checks entirely. While the maximum fine for such violations is CHF 50,000, the cost here was human life. Security consultants admit that fake IDs and lax enforcement are rampant, but the existence of an unmonitored "back door" suggests systemic negligence rather than simple oversight. As the investigation proceeds, the focus must shift to how easily regulations were circumvented, turning a night of celebration into a tragedy for Switzerland's youth.