Two doctors and the 'ketamine queen' charged in overdose death of actor Matthew Perry

Menna

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Two doctors and the 'ketamine queen' charged in overdose death of actor Matthew Perry​

Two other individuals, Perry's live-in personal assistant and a reputed narcotics distributor, were charged on Thursday in connection with Perry’s death last year from ketamine.


Aug. 15, 2024, 9:45 AM EDT / Updated Aug. 15, 2024, 1:32 PM EDT
By Andrew Blankstein, Eric Leonard, NBC Los Angeles and Rich Schapiro
Two California doctors, a reputed drug dealer known as the "ketamine queen," an alleged narcotics distributor and Matthew Perry's live-in personal assistant have been charged in connection with the accidental overdose death of the actor last year, federal prosecutors said Thursday.
Perry, 54, was found face down in the heated end of a pool at his Pacific Palisades home on Oct. 28, 2023. The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office attributed his death to the acute effects of ketamine, an anesthetic with psychedelic properties.

According to an 18-count superseding indictment, Jasveen Sangha, a North Hollywood resident who sold ketamine and other drugs, provided Perry's assistant with the ketamine that ultimately led to the actor's death. The assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, injected Perry with the drug on the day he died, according to the indictment. The syringe was provided by Salvador Plasencia, a doctor who had also distributed ketamine to Perry and his assistant in the past, the indictment says.
Sangha and Plasencia were both arrested on Thursday in southern California. A lawyer for Sangha did not immediately respond to a request for comment. She was arrested in March in connection with a separate federal drug case but was released from custody after posting a $100,000 bond, according to court records.
Plasencia's lawyer was not listed in court records.
The family of “Dateline” correspondent Keith Morrison, who is Perry’s stepfather, said in a statement that they welcomed the news of the law enforcement action.
“We were and still are heartbroken by Matthew’s death, but it has helped to know law enforcement has taken his case very seriously,” the family said. “We look forward to justice taking its course.”
Los Angeles police said in May that they were working with federal authorities to investigate the source of the ketamine Perry had consumed.
Ketamine has been a popular party drug for decades. In recent years, it has shown promise as an alternative treatment for depression. A growing number of clinics offer it as an infusion or injection for a wide variety of mental health problems.



Perry had been undergoing ketamine infusion therapy to treat depression and anxiety, but his last session took place more than a week prior to his death. The medical examiner noted that the ketamine in Perry’s system “could not be from that infusion therapy” given its short half-life.
The levels of ketamine in his body were high — equivalent to the amount used for general anesthesia during surgery, according to the medical examiner.
The coroner ultimately ruled his death an accident. Contributing factors included drowning, coronary artery disease and the effects of buprenorphine, which is used to treat opioid use disorder.
Perry, best known for playing Chandler Bing on “Friends,” had been open about his lengthy struggles with opioid addiction and alcoholism, which he chronicled in his 2022 memoir, “Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing.” But at the time of his death, he had been clean for 19 months, according to the medical examiner’s report.
It’s not uncommon for law enforcement to investigate — and in some cases bring charges against — the people who supplied the drugs that caused a high-profile death.
After the death of Michael Jackson in 2009, his private physician, Dr. Conrad Murray, was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter for providing the singer with a fatal dose of powerful drugs. More recently, federal prosecutors in New York brought charges against four men who supplied actor Michael K. Williams with the fentanyl-laced heroin that killed him in 2021.


How they gonna pay back those student loans in jail
 

Dreamchaser

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The only reason we get these charges is because he's famous. In 2023 there were over 100,000 overdose deaths, I'm sure they ain't investigating this shyt that hard.

It's like someone willing to jump off the Golden Gate Bridge and charging the construction worker for laying the concrete. This was his outcome regardless of out he did.
 

boogers

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how is it anyone elses fault that this dipshyt decided to take suboxone and ketamine together.. in a hot tub. its his own dumb-ass fault he drowned.

zero sympathy for this stiff and bloated cac :camby:

fukk him and his 'legacy' - a show based in a new york that somehow magically lacks brown and black people
 

maxamusa

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how is it anyone elses fault that this dipshyt decided to take suboxone and ketamine together.. in a hot tub. its his own dumb-ass fault he drowned.

zero sympathy for this stiff and bloated cac :camby:

fukk him and his 'legacy' - a show based in a new york that somehow magically lacks brown and black people



Seinfeld really was the GOAT NY 90s sitcom. I hate how friends is even rated like that. show was lame AF.
 

boogers

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Didn't they do with this Mac Miller's dealer 2?


0 accountability for the fiend.


They need to legalize all drugs if this how they doing it.
in mac millers**** case, he was given a fake xanny bar with fentanyl in it, which killed him. matthew perry died from prescription drugs rerouted from a doctor.

there was criminal negligence in millers case; i dont see it here. matthew perry knew what he was taking, knew his own tolerance, and decided to push ahead anyway... while in a hot tub.

zero sympathy. and it aint his plugs fault.

edit: i confused mac miller and lil peeps death. miller died from fake oxys, not xanax. lil peep died from xanax. no offense to any fans of either two artists, but neither were my style, and its like trying to tell 'flat white' and 'eggshell white' apart.
 

re'up

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They absolutely prosecute everyday people overdose deaths, people who aren't famous. but there are so many you can't do them all. They are in press releases just like this one, everyday, or every few weeks. You guys just don't read them. which is understandable.

in hot spots like LA, and SD, in LA there's like 9 a day. San Diego there's like 3. there are like 1,000 a year. or more. There were maybe 800 OD deaths in San Diego in 2021, they probably prosecuted a dozen people or maybe 25. and sometimes you don't have leads. Guy buys on the street. No phone. No texts. Dies. How do you trace that?

so of course high profile deaths are going to be investigated and prosecuted.
 
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