Hero boxer Benjamin Johnson, 18, who died with bouncer trying to save others in Swiss bar fire

Benjamin Johnson was hailed a hero (Picture: Swiss Boxing Federation/Instagram)
A teenage boxer who died trying to save his friend and a âheart-of-goldâ bouncer who pushed survivors to safety are the latest to be named among the 40 killed in the Swiss ski resort inferno.
Benjamin Johnson, 18, died during the New Year blaze at the popular Constellation bar in Crans-Montana.
The âpromising athleteâ, who was a member of the Lausanne Boxing Club, was hailed a hero by the Swiss Boxing Federation.
The organisation said on Instagram: âIt is with deep sadness that SwissBoxing learned of the death of Benjamin Johnson (Club Lausannois de Boxing), a victim of the tragedy in Crans-Montana.
âBenjamin left us as a hero, helping his friend. Our thoughts are with his family, relatives and all the victims of this national tragedyâ.
Swiss Boxing president Amir Orfia described Benjaminâs heroism as fire ravaged the doomed alpine resort bar.
He said: âThis ultimate act of selflessness perfectly reflects who he was: someone who always helped others. Benjamin was a promising athlete and a radiant personality.
âHaving watched him grow up, first as a boxer and then as his coach, I remember him as a young man who was always positive, smiling and respectful. He was always the first to support his teammates.â

Bouncer Stefan Ivanovic helped push some of the guests out of the front (Picture: Supplied)
It came as the best friend of a security guard who risked his life to save others in the New Yearâs Eve bar fire told Metro the 31-year-old âdied a heroâ.
When the fire broke out, it is believed that Stefan Ivanovic â a bouncer and security guard at the bar â helped push some of the guests out the front door before going back in to help others. âHis selflessness helped people survive but also caused him to lose his own life doing something so heroic,â explained fellow co-worker Ruben Adolph.
Although both men were hired by the same security company, Mr Adolph had been working at another bar close to La Constellation that night.
According to his friends and family, Serbian-born Mr Ivanovic â who has dual citizenship and had lived and worked in Switzerland for more than two decades, died doing a job he was so good at.
âHe was one of those people who enter a life without noise, but occupy a huge place in it,â recalled Mr Adolph. âHe was a brother, a friend, a colleague; he was everything to me.â

Tributes have been paid to Stefan who has a golden heart (Picture: Supplied)
âHe had no malice inside of him, just a golden heart,â added Mr Adolph. âHis absence will forever leave a void in our hearts.â
Mr Adolph said they were finding it hard to come to terms with the loss of so many young lives.
He added: âItâs very difficult to comprehend the horrific fire that took place that night and so many of us feel unable to talk but when it comes to Stefan there are so many words I want to say.
âHis departure leaves so much pain, but also precious memories, laughter, simple moments that have become treasures today. I will protect, carry and honour your memory forever.â
On Sunday evening, Swiss authorities confirmed that all the victims of the fire had been identified.
In total, 21 of the dead were Swiss citizens, seven were French and six Italian.
Other victims came from Romania, Turkey, Portugal, Belgium as well as one Swiss-French dual national.
![TOPSHOT - A grab of a video obtained from the X account of @Tyroneking36852 shows a fire in a bar in Crans-Montana, a ski resort in the canton of Valais, Switzerland, early on January 1, 2026. The footage was filmed by a tourist from New York who told AFP that he saw people running and screaming from the party venue. Several dozen people are presumed dead and around 100 injured after a fire ripped through a crowded bar in the luxury Swiss ski resort of Crans-Montana, Swiss police said on January 1, 2026. Police, firefighters and rescuers rushed to the popular resort, which is set to host the Ski World Cup from January 30, after the fire broke out in the early hours of New Year's Day. (Photo by @Tyroneking36852 / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE MANDATORY CREDIT ?? AFP PHOTO / X / @Tyroneking36852?? - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS [- NO ARCHIVE ]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/SEI_279428874-07ac.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
The footage was filmed by a tourist from New York who told AFP that he saw people running and screaming from the party venue (Picture: AFP)
The last 16 victims identified included two Swiss twins aged 15, a Swiss woman aged 22, a Swiss and French woman aged 24, two Italian girls aged 16 and 15, an Italian boy aged 16, a 22-year-old Portuguese woman, a 17-year-old Belgian girl, two French women aged 33 and 26, two French men aged 23 and 20, two French teenage boys aged 17 and 14.
Some 119 people were injured, including many with severe burns.
Switzerland will hold a national day of mourning on Friday, national president Guy Parmelin said on Sunday, with church bells ringing across the country and a minuteâs silence planned.
âIn this moment of reflection, everyone in Switzerland can personally remember the victims of the disaster,â Parmelin told newspaper Sonntagsblick.
Another victim who died in the inferno is a âbeautifulâ schoolgirl who went to a British school.
Charlotte Niddam, 15, was among the last 16 victims to have been identified by police and had Israeli, British, and French citizenship, reports said.

Tributes have been paid to Charlotte Niddam, who was killed in the deadly fire at a Swiss bar on New Yearâs Eve (Picture: TikTok)
Charlotteâs family said in a social media post on Sunday: âIt is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beautiful daughter and sister Charlotte.
âDetails regarding the funeral arrangements will follow shortly.â
The post said Charlotteâs funeral is expected to take place in Paris later this week.
Charlotte attended Immanuel College in Hertfordshire according to multiple reports and after the fire the school said in a statement it was âpraying for a miracleâ.
The fire likely started when âfountain candleâ sparklers were held aloft too close to the ceiling at the Constellation bar, the regionâs chief prosecutor has said.
Authorities previously said they would look into whether the material on the ceiling of the venue that was designed to muffle sound conformed to safety regulations.
Officials said they would also look at other safety measures on the premises, including fire extinguishers and escape routes.
One of the managers of the Swiss ski club tragedy that claimed the lives of 40 people has previously been convicted of kidnapping and pimping, according to reports.
Jacques Moretti is under criminal investigation for manslaughter with his wife Jessica, for the blaze at Le Constellation in the Crans-Montana ski resort on New Yearâs Day.
Multiple articles in French media over the weekend have described Mr Moretti as a convicted criminal who previously served time in prison.
Europe 1 is currently reporting that he was âconvicted and imprisoned in Savoie, France, about twenty years ago for fraud, kidnapping, and false imprisonment.
âSince then, he has supposedly kept a low profile. Here in Crans-Montana, he owns three businesses â  two bars, including Le Constellation, and a restaurant, Le Vieux Chalet, which he completely renovated last year.â

Photographs show the very first moments of the Swiss Constellation Bar fire (Picture: Jamie Wiseman for The Daily Mail)
Le Parisien reports: âAccording to our information, Jacques Moretti is no stranger to the French justice system.
âHe is known for pimping cases dating back some twenty years, as well as for a kidnapping and confinement case. He was imprisoned in Savoie.â
Quoting its own legal source, RTL, another national radio network, reported: âThe Corsican-born man in his sixties was imprisoned in Savoie in 2005, for involvement in cases of pimping, fraud, kidnapping, and false imprisonment.â
There was no initial response to the revelations from lawyers representing Mr Moretti.