🚨 DISTURBING TRUTH EXPOSED
The Swiss bar where 40 lives were lost in the deadly blaze reportedly went FIVE YEARS without a single safety inspection. As shocking lapses come to light — from ignored warnings to missing safeguards — public anger is exploding, and grieving families are demanding answers.
How could a place packed with people be left unchecked for so long… and who allowed it to happen?
👇 ALL THE CHILLING DETAILS waiting below 👇
SHOCK REVEALED: Swiss Bar Where 40 Died in Inferno ‘Had NOT Been Inspected for FIVE YEARS’ — Safety Failures Spark Fury and Grief
Crans-Montana, Switzerland – January 8, 2026 – A week after the devastating New Year’s fire at Le Constellation bar that claimed 40 lives and injured 116 others, a bombshell admission from local authorities has ignited widespread fury: the venue had not undergone mandatory annual fire safety inspections for five years.

en.wikipedia.org

reuters.com
At a tense press conference on January 6, Crans-Montana Mayor Nicolas Féraud confirmed that no periodic safety checks were conducted at the popular nightclub between 2020 and 2025, despite Swiss regulations requiring annual inspections for public establishments. “We bitterly regret this,” Féraud said, describing the oversight as inexplicable. The last full inspection occurred in May 2019, when minor issues – such as installing an anti-panic handle on a door – were noted and addressed, but no major problems with flammable materials were flagged at the time.

euronews.com
Swiss bar owners ‘overwhelmed with grief’ in first public comments …
The revelation has fueled outrage among grieving families, survivors, and the public, who question how such a lapse could occur in a nation renowned for its precision and stringent safety standards. Critics argue that regular inspections might have identified the highly flammable acoustic foam panels lining the basement ceiling – the material believed to have accelerated the blaze’s deadly spread when ignited by festive sparklers on champagne bottles.

theconversation.com
What the New Year’s fire at a Swiss bar tells us about fire prevention
Valais cantonal security official Stéphane Ganzer emphasized that existing checklists explicitly require verification of materials like soundproofing foam. “The checklists are very clear, and obviously, checking materials – especially foam like this – is part of the basic inspection,” he stated, expressing shock at the municipal failure.
The fire erupted around 1:30 a.m. on January 1 during packed New Year’s celebrations, primarily in the basement where hundreds of young revelers – many teenagers – danced under low ceilings. Servers carrying champagne bottles topped with lit “fountain” sparklers held them aloft, inadvertently sparking the foam. Flames raced across the ceiling, triggering a flashover: intense heat ignited everything simultaneously, producing thick, toxic black smoke that reduced visibility to zero within seconds.
reuters.com

pbs.org
Survivors described an explosion-like blast as pressure built, ceilings collapsing in fiery debris, and panic turning the narrow staircase – the main exit – into a deadly bottleneck. Reports suggest overcrowding, with estimates of 200-300 people inside against a capacity of around 200-300 (split between floors), and potential issues with door accessibility or secondary exits.
Hypothetically, had inspections been routine from 2020 onward, authorities might have mandated flame-retardant coverings for the foam installed during 2015 renovations, widened exits, or prohibited indoor pyrotechnics sooner. In a room where toxic fumes could incapacitate in minutes, such measures could have allowed precious seconds for escape, potentially saving lives.
The tragedy claimed victims aged 14 to 39, including at least 15 minors from Switzerland, Italy, France, and beyond. Heartbreaking stories – final texts like “Mom, I can’t breathe,” a father’s desperate rush into flames, sisters’ loving goodbye calls, and a young Italian golf prodigy’s “Mom… I love you” – have gripped the nation.
In response to the scandal, Crans-Montana has commissioned an external firm to audit all 128 public venues, banned indoor pyrotechnics municipality-wide, and paused national efforts to relax fire codes. The municipality has joined the criminal probe as a civil party, providing all documents. A separate criminal complaint targets municipal officials for negligent homicide and related charges, alleging “mafia-like” favoritism in inspections.
Mayor Féraud, facing calls to resign, refused: “I’m not resigning… we were elected by the people of Crans-Montana.” He noted a small team of five inspectors oversees over 10,000 buildings, but could not explain the specific lapse for Le Constellation.
Bar owners Jacques and Jessica Moretti, a French couple operating since 2015, face charges of negligent homicide and bodily harm. They expressed being “overwhelmed with grief” in their first statement, pledging cooperation.
Grief blankets the resort town. Makeshift memorials outside the sealed-off bar overflow with flowers, candles, teddy bears, and notes: “Rest in peace among the stars.” Silent marches, vigils, and repatriations of foreign victims – including Italians on a military flight – underscore the loss. A memorial ceremony honored the dead, with emergency workers praised amid the sorrow.

theguardian.com

france24.com

theguardian.com

bbc.com

swissinfo.ch

lemonde.fr

france24.com
Hypothetically, without the inspection gap, the foam might have been replaced or treated post-2019, averting the rapid spread that turned celebration into catastrophe. As forensic probes continue, Switzerland confronts systemic questions: how did oversight fail in a tourism-dependent region? The disturbing details – years of unchecked risks in a crowded basement – amplify grief, demanding accountability to prevent future infernos.
In snow-covered Crans-Montana, where Alpine views now frame tributes, fury mixes with tears. Forty families seek justice, survivors heal from burns and trauma, and a nation mourns how preventable lapses contributed to one of its worst modern disasters.