LOCKED IN TO ΓIE? An emergency exit was βππ₯π°ππ²π¬ π₯π¨ππ€ππ,β a bartender has claimed β as investigators probe the deadly Swiss ski resort inferno
A criminal investigation was launched yesterday into the French owners of the Swiss ski bar engulfed by a deadly inferno on New Yearβs Eve, amid claims that an emergency exit at the venue was βalways lockedβ.
Police announced that Jacques Moretti, 49, and his wife Jessica, 40, were being investigated on suspicion of manslaughter by negligence, bodily harm and arson after a horrific blaze killed 40 and injured 119.
The inferno at Le Constellation in the Alpine resort of CransβMontana erupted in the venueβs basement bar when sparklers in champagne bottlesΒ set a ceiling covered in insulation foam alight.
Harrowing video footage showed revellers, many of whom were teenagers, continuing to party as the flames spread across the ceiling, losing crucial seconds during which they could have fled.
The venue was branded a βdeathtrapβ after it emerged that partygoers squeezed up a narrow staircase to escape the flames and toxic smoke in the basement.
But in a major development, it was yesterday claimed there was another potential escape route via an emergency exit within the basement β but that it was allegedly always locked.
Andrea, 31, a bartender who works elsewhere in the resort but was a regular at Le Constellation, told German newspaper Bild: βThere was an entrance that also served as an exit. And there was an emergency exit. But whenever I was there, it was always locked.
βEveryone in town knew things were bound to go wrong eventually.
βThe emergency exit was in a separate smoking room. Hardly anyone used it; most went up to the conservatory. The smoking room was used as a kind of storage room. There was a sofa inside in front of the door, and carelessly discarded objects lay outside.β

Pictured: 16βyearβold girlΒ Chiara Costanzo, from Milan, Italy, was the second person to be named as a victim

A makeshift memorial outside the βLe Constellationβ bar following the fire

Another witness, Grigori, who was on his way to the bar when the fire erupted, and whose friend is among the missing, said: βThereβs another exit, but I think they were locking it because some people were escaping without paying.β
Read More
Pictured: How Swiss bar owners renovated club themselves β as they say they are βvery unwellβ

The Mail on Sunday has also identified a third exit on the ground floor of the bar, which led into a covered shopping area that includes a ski rental shop.
Anyone using that exit would then, however, have to go through another glass door to escape on to the street. It is unclear whether either of those doors were open or locked when the fire started at 1.30am.
The revelations came as a 16βyearβold girl from Milan, Italy, was the second person to be named as a victim. Chiara Costanzoβs father, Andrea, told an Italian newspaper he felt a βgreat emptinessβ after receiving a call βthat should never come to a fatherβ.
βUntil the very end we hoped that Chiara was among the injured admitted to the hospital but not yet identified,β he said. βThen, without warning, the world collapses. Youβre never ready. You canβt be.
βItβs unnatural for a father to lose a daughter. I wish she wasnβt βjustβ a name on a list of victims. Because she was never a number. She was a beloved daughter.β
Italian national Emanuele Galeppini, 17 and a golf prodigy, was the first victim to be reported dead, with the news confirmed by the Italian Golf Federation on Friday.
Police yesterday said eight Swiss victims had been identified and their bodies released to their families. They are four women and four men, including two 16βyearβolds.
Dozens of families, however, continue to face an agonising wait as experts attempt to identify the remaining 30 victims and five of the most seriously injured.

The entrance of the bar Le Constellation where a fire ripped through the venue during New Yearβs Eve celebrations in the Alpine ski resort town of CransβMontana

Mourners hug alongside floral tributes to the victims of the fire near the bar in CransβMontana

Swiss justice minister Beat Jans (second from the right) looks at the tributes to the victims

A firefighter pays tribute to the victims of the deadly fire at the Le Constellation bar in CransβMontana, Switzerland

A photo appears to show the moment champagne sparklers set fire to material on the ceiling of the Swiss nightclub

Footage shows the deadlyΒ flashover, when extreme heat caused everything inside the enclosed space to ignite almost at once, that left people little chance to flee
βItβs a wait that destroys peopleβs stability,β said Elvira Venturella, an Italian psychologist working with the families. Those missing include Frenchβborn Charlotte Niddam, 15, who attended Immanuel College, a private Jewish school in Hertfordshire, and the Jewish Free School in North London.
Read More
Firefighters who braved Swiss ski resort inferno honour victims they couldnβt save

One of her friends, Summer Chesler, yesterday posted a video montage showing the pair dancing together with the caption: βI miss my best friend.β
Another friend, Sophie, shared a separate TikTok video with a caption that read: βMy heart has broken. Please come home Charlotte, we are all waiting for you.β
Sixteenβyearβold Arthur Brodard is also among the missing. His mother Laetitia, from Lausanne, Switzerland, said: βThere are five unidentified people in hospital [but] the authorities refuse to tell us where they are, in which country, in which canton. Anger is starting to rise. There are more than 30 parents looking for our children.β
Stephane Ganzer, state councillor in charge of the Department of Security, said the identification of victims was βa top priorityβ, acknowledging the βunbearable waitβ endured by families.
Mr Moretti yesterday appeared for the first time since the tragedy, near a restaurant he owns in the nearby village of Lens. He refused to answer questions from the MoS.
Meanwhile, last nightβs episode of ITVβs The Masked Singer scrapped a performance of the song Disco Inferno, which featured dancers in fire suits, βowing to potential insensitivitiesβ.
