The investigation into the deadly New Year's fire at the Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana has taken a dramatic turn, with prosecutors adding forgery charges against one of the owners and the canton of Valais allocating CHF1.25 million to fund the expanding police and legal efforts.

"If they hold it up high and set the foam on the ceiling on fire, the Constellation will burn down."
"This is a couple who share a household: it's the Everest of collusion."
A staggering CHF 1.255 million has been weaponized by the Canton of Valais to ensure the Crans-Montana fire probe leaves no stone unturned. This massive financial injection, approved by the Grand Council, signals an unprecedented commitment to prosecuting the tragedy that claimed 41 lives. The funding breakdown is clinical and comprehensive: CHF 670,000 fuels the Prosecutor's Office with a surge of new registrars and secretaries, while the cantonal police receive CHF 585,000 to cover mounting security and operational costs. This is not merely a budget increase; it is a declaration of war against negligence. More than CHF 100,000 is earmarked specifically for expert mandates and translations, highlighting the international complexity of a case involving 14 different suspects. As the investigation enters its most aggressive phase, the state is ensuring that financial constraints will not shield the guilty from the full weight of Swiss law.
The legal landscape shifted violently on Friday as Jessica Moretti, co-owner of the ill-fated Le Constellation, was hit with a fresh charge of forgery. This new indictment centers on a 2015 invoice for polyurethane acoustic foamâthe very material that transformed the bar's basement into a death trap on New Year's Eve. Prosecutors allege the document was falsified to mask the true nature of the flammable materials lining the ceiling. While defense attorneys dismiss the charge as a 'non-event' unrelated to the tragedy, lawyers for the victims' families are outraged. They argue the invoice is central to understanding how such hazardous materials were installed in a public venue. Jessica Moretti now faces a harrowing list of charges: negligent homicide, negligent arson, and negligent infliction of serious bodily injury. The addition of forgery suggests a calculated attempt to deceive authorities, a narrative that prosecutors are now pursuing with renewed vigor.
A grueling 10-hour confrontation hearing in Sion has unmasked chilling evidence of prior knowledge. Prosecutors read aloud a 2019 message from Jessica Moretti to her staff that serves as a haunting prophecy: 'If they hold [sparklers] up high and set the foam on the ceiling on fire, the Constellation will burn down.' This revelation shatters any defense of unforeseen accident. Further compounding the owners' peril is a thumbs-up emoji sent by Jacques Moretti in response to an employee confirming that an emergency exit remained blocked. Lawyer Gilles-Antoine Hofstetter branded the situation the 'Everest of collusion,' slamming the delay in questioning the couple together. The prosecution's strategy is clear: demonstrate that the owners were fully aware of the lethal risks they were managing. The evidence suggests a culture of safety violations where profit was prioritized over the lives of the teenagers who frequented the resort's popular nightspot.
While the legal machinery grinds forward, the human cost remains staggering: 41 dead and 115 injured, a toll that has scarred the Valais region forever. Many of the victims were teenagers, some as young as 16, whose lives were cut short in a flash of negligent fire. In the courtroom, the tension was palpable as grieving parents like Laetitia Brodard-Sitre confronted the Morettis, accusing them of 'playing the victim' while families visit graves daily. The scope of the investigation continues to widen, with 14 individualsâincluding local officialsâunder the microscope for their roles in safety inspections and licensing. This case is no longer just about a bar fire; it is a trial of the Swiss regulatory system itself. As the CHF 1.25 million in funding begins to flow, the people of Crans-Montana and the families of the 41 victims wait for a verdict that can finally offer a semblance of accountability for a night of preventable horror.