The investigation into the deadly New Year's Eve fire in Crans-Montana has intensified, with a safety officer citing IT system changes for delayed inspections. Meanwhile, a former officer has been questioned by prosecutors amid allegations that safety recommendations were ignored.

"Not a single moment goes by when we don't think of the victims -- not a single moment."
"serious misconduct"
In a staggering admission that has sent shockwaves through the Valais region, the current safety officer for Crans-Montana has blamed a mere software update for the failure to inspect the death trap that was Le Constellation. With 41 lives lost and 115 people injured, the justification that an IT system change hindered safety checks feels like a slap in the face to grieving families. The officer, who has held the post since May 2024, told prosecutors that a shift in the task management software created administrative chaos, directly contributing to the delays in mandatory fire safety inspections.
This bureaucratic excuse attempts to explain away a critical gap: the bar had not undergone an obligatory annual fire inspection since 2019. While the ashes of the New Year's Eve tragedy are still being sifted, the narrative that digital incompetence trumped human safety is emerging as a focal point of the investigation. The software, originally developed for Valais fire services, was adopted by municipalities later, but the canton has washed its hands of the issue, stating it was not up to them to intervene in business relationships. As the investigation intensifies, the question remains: how did a glitch become a graveyard?
The legal battle surrounding the inferno has exploded, with victims' lawyers launching a ferocious attack on the integrity of the investigation itself. In a bold move, lawyer Garen Ucari has demanded the immediate recusal of three investigating magistrates, citing an "unprecedented number of serious shortcomings." The accusations are damning: prosecutors are alleged to have delayed the seizure of critical evidenceâincluding mobile phones and documentsâraising the terrifying prospect that proof of negligence may have been destroyed or tampered with.
Ucari, representing the father of a young woman killed in the blaze, did not mince words, accusing the authorities of failing to mitigate the risk of collusion. He questioned why the bar's owners, Jacques and Jessica Moretti, were not detained immediately following the disaster. Another lawyer, Sebastien Fanti, echoed these sentiments, stating that widespread disapproval of the prosecutors' conduct made the request for recusal inevitable. As the legal machinery grinds on, the families of the 156 victims are left wondering if justice is being compromised by procedural incompetence.
The tragedy at Le Constellation was not an unpredictable accident, but a disaster foretold. A former municipal safety officer, questioned extensively by Valais prosecutors, revealed that his specific safety recommendations were ignored not once, but twice by the bar's management. Between 2018 and early 2024, red flags were raised, yet no sanctions followed the lack of compliance. This revelation paints a damning portrait of negligence where profit or apathy seemingly outweighed public safety.
The fire, sparked when champagne bottles with pyrotechnics ignited ceiling sound insulation, tore through the venue with terrifying speed. The bar's owners, the Morettis, are now facing charges of manslaughter by negligence and arson by negligence. While Jacques Moretti claims they are "devastated" and think of the victims "every single moment," the evidence suggests a pattern of ignored protocols. The juxtaposition of their remorse against the allegations of ignored warnings creates a tension that will define the upcoming criminal proceedings.
The investigation has exposed a systemic collapse in the prioritization of public safety in Crans-Montana. The current head of safety admitted to a shocking hierarchy of care: facing personnel shortages, he prioritized inspections of hospitals and hotels, leaving "public establishments" like bars at the bottom of the list. This calculated risk left venues like Le Constellation unchecked for years, a gamble that ultimately cost 41 lives. Furthermore, it emerged that the current safety officer did not hold a federal fire safety specialist certificate in 2017, only obtaining a health and safety certificate in 2023.
While the officer has admitted "moral responsibility," this confession offers little solace to the survivors and grieving families. The tragedy highlights the lethal limits of the Swiss federal system, where enforcement varies wildly between municipalities. As Switzerland grapples with one of its deadliest fires in recent history, the message is clear: the system didn't just fail; it was designed with gaps that allowed a catastrophe to slip through.