This is the chilling moment a staff member at the Swiss ski bar that went up in flames begged revellers to keep sparklers away from its roof foam on New Year’s Eve in 2019.
The warning occurred six years before the inferno in Le Constellation nightclub that killed 40 people and left 116 injured, many with severe, third-degree burns.
‘Watch out for the foam, watch out for the foam,’ the waiter can he heard shouting in the video, as a sparkler in a bottle approaches the ceiling dangerously.
The footage was sent to Radio Télévision Suisse (RTS) by a guest at Le Constellation in the Swiss ski resort of Crans-Montana, who was present at the evening in 2019.
‘I remember, we were very close to the ceiling, and that’s even why the waiter made that comment […] As an adult, he realised there might be a risk,’ she said.
Swiss authorities said the enormous fire that engulfed the bar on New Year’s Eve was started when sparklers were held too close to the ceiling, which was covered in flammable, foam sound-proofing panels.
Investigators believe it then rapidly developed into a ‘flashover’ – likely igniting much of the venue in seconds and rendering escape almost impossible.
A criminal investigation has been launched into the French couple – Jacques Moretti and his wife Jessica, who managed the bar, which had not had any safety checks, investigations or auditing for five years.
‘Watch out for the foam, watch out for the foam,’ the waiter can he heard shouting in the footage
The footage was sent to Radio Télévision Suisse (RTS) by a guest at Le Constellation in the Swiss ski resort of Crans-Montana
Teenage sisters who were celebrating the New Year have been identified as two of the 40 victims killed as a fire broke out in a bar in Switzerland – alongside a musician who was performing a DJ set as the flames took hold.
Swiss nationals Alicia and Diana Gunst, 15 and 14, died in the inferno at Le Constellation bar in the early hours of January 1, alongside French producer Matéo Lesguer and 37 other people.
Swiss authorities say more than half of the 40 victims were 18 or under.
Eighty-three of the 116 people injured remain in hospital as of Monday afternoon, some still fighting for their lives.
The fire is believed to have started as wait staff waved champagne bottles plugged with sparklers close to the ceiling at around 1.30am.
Forty people hailing from seven different countries were killed: 26 of those were aged between 14 and 18.
Some were burnt beyond recognition, and were only identified through the use of DNA analysis.
Among the dead were 10 Swiss males aged 16 to 31; 11 Swiss females aged 14 to 24; one 24-year-old woman who held dual Swiss-French nationality; three 16-year-old Italian boys and two Italian girls aged 15 and 16, and five French males aged 14 to 39.
Two French women aged 33 and 26; a 15-year-old girl with triple British-French-Israeli nationality; a 16-year-old boy who held dual Italian-UAE nationality; an 18-year-old Romanian boy; a Belgian 17-year-old girl; a Portuguese 22-year-old woman and an 18-year-old Turkish boy were also identified.
Funerals are taking place this week, with five of the six Italian victims’ bodies repatriated on Monday afternoon.
The bar’s owners are suspected of manslaughter, bodily harm and causing a fire, all by way of negligence.
Investigators are examining whether the soundproof material used on the ceiling of the bar, thought to have ignited in close proximity of the sparklers, conformed to safety measures.
Former staff have also claimed that safety standards at the club were poor, alleging that fire extinguishers were kept under lock and key and that the bar’s emergency exit was often locked.
Partygoers, six years later, carrying champagne bottles filled with sparklers, apparently moments before the blaze on New Year’s Eve
A waitress at Le Constellation, six years later, sitting on the shoulders of a colleague while holding a sparkler in the air, moments before the deadly blaze ripped through the bar on January 1
On Saturday, multiple media outlets in France and Belgium reported that Mr Moretti, who is originally from the Mediterranean island of Corsica, is well known to the French authorities.
In 2005 he was implicated in a kidnap plot in Savoie, the Alpine department of France close to Crans–Montana, and incarcerated.
Le Parisien reports: ‘According to our information, Jacques Moretti is no stranger to the French justice system.
‘He is known for pimping cases dating back some twenty years, as well as for a kidnapping and confinement case. He was imprisoned in Savoie.’
Quoting its own legal source, RTL, the radio network, reported: ‘The Corsican–born man in his sixties was imprisoned in Savoie in 2005, for involvement in cases of pimping, fraud, kidnapping, and false imprisonment.’
There was no initial response to the revelations from lawyers representing Mr Moretti.
He was questioned by Swiss prosecutors on Friday, along with his wife, Jessica Moretti, who is in her 40s.
Both are currently at liberty, as they assist the judicial authorities with their enquiries.
They have indicated that they will open an enquiry into ‘arson by negligence’ and ‘manslaughter by negligence’ if ‘criminal liability is established’.
In the meantime, the French couple have not been formally charged, and are free to travel.
Swiss attorney general Beatrice Pilloud said: ‘Everything suggests that the fire started with incandescent candles placed in champagne bottles, which were brought too close to the ceiling, causing a rapid and widespread conflagration.’
Mr Moretti has claimed his bar ‘followed all safety regulations’, despite being inspected only ‘three times in ten years’ by health and safety officials.
Article 8 of the local fire prevention code states that inspections must take place ‘every year in buildings open to the public or presenting special risks’.
Mr Moretti, who owns three businesses around Crans–Montana, was not in the Constellation on the night of the fire, but his wife was, and suffered a burned arm.
Jacques Moretti (pictured right) now in his sixties was imprisoned in Savoie in 2005, for involvement in cases of pimping, fraud, kidnapping and false imprisonment
Flowers and candles in tribute to the victims are displayed at a makeshift memorial following a fire at ‘Le Constellation’ bar during New Year’s Eve celebrations, killing 40 people and injuring 119
Firefighters of the regional fire and rescue service Sapeur-Pompiers de Sierre gather to pay their respects to the victims of the deadly fire
The owners of Le Constellation, built in 1977, asked in 2015 to extend the venue to include an outdoor, covered terrace, which was granted.
Once the development was completed, inspectors went in to assess it – but they focused on the outside area, not what had been changed in the interior.
Asked at a press conference about the fact that the bar had not been checked in five years, Crans-Montana’s mayor Nicolas Feraud said: ‘I have no answer for you today.’
‘We’re profoundly sorry about that and I know how hard that will be for the families,’ he added.
He said it was ‘down to the judges to know whether we’ll be part of this case or not’, referring to whether councillors will be questioned as part of the criminal investigation that has been opened by Swiss prosecutors.
He added that ‘the city of Crans-Montana, we believe we are also a victim in this case’.










