An investigation into the deadly Crans-Montana bar fire has uncovered documents showing the local council was aware of fire safety inspection deficiencies months before the incident that claimed 41 lives. The local fire chief has now been questioned by prosecutors.

"They wanted to do a show with bottles, and then the whole bar exploded."
"In a case of this magnitude, there is an absolute need for transparency, respect for procedural rules and confidence in the justice system."
The catastrophic fire at Le Constellation bar was not an unpredictable accidentâit was a disaster foretold by years of ignored red flags. Investigations have now confirmed that Swiss safety inspectors had identified critical hazards at the venue as far back as January 2018. A staggering eight years before the blaze claimed 40 lives, authorities were already demanding the bar's management address missing evacuation plans and clarify the location of fire extinguishers.
These were not minor administrative oversights; they were fundamental breaches of public safety. In 2018, the municipal safety officer explicitly ordered manager Jacques Moretti to limit capacity to 100 people per floorâa directive that appears to have been tragically disregarded on the fateful New Year's Eve. The timeline reveals a pattern of negligence that is as infuriating as it is heartbreaking. While the warning signs were flashing red, the follow-through from authorities stalled, leaving patrons to party in a venue that was effectively a ticking time bomb.
In a shocking revelation of systemic failure, it has emerged that Le Constellation operated without a single fire safety inspection for five full years leading up to the tragedy. From 2019 until the night of the fire in 2026, the venue vanished from the regulatory radar. This gap exists despite the municipality conducting a massive 1,400 inspections in 2025 aloneâsomehow, the one bar with a known history of non-compliance fell through the cracks.
The municipality has admitted this lapse represents a "serious failure," a sentiment that offers little comfort to the families of the victims. In May 2019, Moretti was given a three-month deadline to comply with safety regulations. When that deadline passed, silence followed. No inspectors returned to verify compliance. No shutdowns were ordered. This administrative void allowed a culture of "reckless risk" to fester unchecked, directly contributing to one of the deadliest fires in modern Swiss history.
The physical conditions inside the bar turned a celebration into a horror show in seconds. Forensic reports indicate a "flashover" occurred when sparklers ignited highly flammable acoustic foam on the low basement ceiling. Witnesses described a "fireball" and a terrifying "whoosh" as the blaze consumed the oxygen. But it was the building's layout that sealed the fate of the victims.
A crushing 34 bodies were discovered piled at the bottom of the staircase, the primary escape route. Investigations reveal that renovations carried out after 2015 had narrowed this critical exit, creating a deadly bottleneck. While the owners' lawyer insists an emergency exit was "open all the time," the grim reality of the body count suggests otherwise. The combination of DIY-store foamâwhich Moretti claims to have testedâand compromised escape routes created a lethal trap from which dozens of teenagers could not escape.
How does an individual with a criminal record for inciting prostitution obtain a license to run a high-profile venue in a Swiss resort? This is the question shaking the Valais administration. Jacques Moretti, the co-owner now in custody, was convicted in France in 2008. Yet, he was granted a license to operate Le Constellation under a legal framework that supposedly demands an "impeccable reputation."
The municipality has remained tight-lipped on whether they ever requested criminal records from France. This oversight suggests a profound failure in the vetting process. While the law has since been tightened, the fact remains that a convicted criminal was permitted to manage public safety for hundreds of patrons. The disconnect between the legal requirements and the on-the-ground enforcement exposes a laxity that critics argue is symptomatic of a broader regulatory malaise in the region.
As the Morettis face charges of manslaughter and arson by negligence, the canton of Valais confronts a crisis of confidence. Legal experts and Italian government officials are harshly criticizing the pace and transparency of the probe, citing delays in detaining the suspects and securing evidence. Alain Macaluso of the University of Lausanne warns of an "absolute need for transparency" to restore faith in the justice system.
The tragedy at Crans-Montana must serve as a watershed moment for Swiss public safety. The era of complacent oversight is over. With 66 burn victims still fighting for recovery in hospitals across Europe, the cost of negligence has been made excruciatingly clear. Switzerland now watches and waits, demanding not just answers, but accountability for a disaster that should never have happened.