Tuesday, August 20, 2024 - American actor, Matthew Perry and his live-in assistant Kenny Iwamasa spent a minimum of $55,000 on 55 ketamine vials and related injections in the 29 days prior to the Friends actor's fatal overdose at the age of 54 in October 2023.
Iwamasa had sent consecutive text messages seeking more of
the surgical anesthetic from his suppliers, including an illegal transaction,
authorities with the Department of Justice said, US Weekly reported
on Sunday after reviewing court documents in the cast against Iwamasa.
Iwamasa, one of five people arrested earlier this
month in connection with Perry's passing - in one instance convened with
the Friends actor and Dr. Salvador Plasencia in a parking lot, where the actor
had been injected with ketamine, according to legal docs reviewed by the
outlet.
Iwamasa and Plasencia had 'exchanged thousands in cash for
bottles' of ketamine, legal docs stated, noting that Plasencia had injected
Perry with ketamine at his home on numerous occasions.
Plasencia in one instance injected the
Williamstown, Massachusetts native, who played Chandler Bing on the
NBC series, 'within hours' of Perry already having been injected with ketamine
The double dose led to Perry's systolic blood pressure
rising to dangerous levels, according to legal docs, with the actor 'unable to
speak or move' as result of the injections.
Iwamasa illegally spent $6,000 on 25 bottles of ketamine,
according to legal docs, nine days after he purchased 25 ketamine vials
illegally.
In that instance, Perry was injected six times in one day by
Iwamasa, and 18 additional times in the next three days, legal docs stated.
Perry, on the day of his death, was injected with ketamine
by Iwamasa three times, as he allegedly told his assistant to 'shoot me up
with a big one,' the outlet reported, citing court docs.
New details drawn from unsealed federal court documents and
a medical examiner's investigation provide a chronological look at the end
of Perry's life.
On September 30, Perry and Iwamasa met at their home in the
Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles with Plasencia.
Perry had been receiving ketamine treatments
for depression - an increasingly common off-label use - from his
regular doctor, but wasn't able to get as much as he wanted. Plasencia texted a
doctor friend in San Diego, Mark Chavez, who agreed to obtain ketamine for him.
'I wonder how much this moron will pay,' Plasencia texted
Chavez. The two met up the same day in Costa Mesa, California - halfway between
Los Angeles and San Diego - and exchanged at least four vials of ketamine.
Plasencia returned to Perry's house, where Iwamasa paid him
$4,500 in cash for the vials. Plasencia gave Perry two injections of
ketamine, and instructed Iwamasa on how to give the injections to the
actor.
Plasencia texted Chavez that the experience 'felt like a bad
movie.'
On October 2, Iwamasa texted Plasencia saying he wanted to
buy not just injection sessions, but to be left with more vials of ketamine,
referring to it in agreed-upon code as 'dr pepper.'
Plasencia appeared, gave Perry the injections, and left
behind the vials of the anesthetic.
On October 4, Iwamasa injected Perry himself for the first
time. He texted the doctor that he had found 'the sweet spot' to put the needle
into his boss, but that trying different spots on Perry had led to them running
out, and they needed more. Plasencia texted Chavez asking if he could keep
supplying the drug so they could become Perry's 'go-to.'
On October 6, Iwamasa told Plasencia they were running low,
and needed more. Plasencia went to Perry's house and sold him one or more
vials.
On October 8, in a late-night meetup at a Santa Monica,
California shopping plaza, Plasencia sold Iwamasa four vials of ketamine for
$6,000 in cash.
On October 10, Iwamasa drove Perry to a public parking lot
in Long Beach, California where they met up with the doctor. He sold them more
ketamine, and gave an injection to Perry while the actor sat in a car. On the
same day, Iwamasa sought even more of the drug from an additional source of
ketamine, reaching out to Erik Fleming, an acquaintance of Perry.
On October 11, Fleming messaged Iwamasa that he can get ketamine from a woman he knows.
'It´s unmarked but it´s amazing - he take one and try it and
I have more if he likes,' Fleming wrote.
The woman, Jasveen Sangha, was known to her customers as the
Ketamine Queen. Fleming texted Iwamasa that she only deals 'with high end
and celebs. If it were not great stuff she´d lose her business.'
On October 12, Plasencia went to Perry's house, where he was
paid $21,000 in cash, some of it owed to him for previous ketamine buys. While
there he injected Perry. The actor immediately froze up and his blood pressure
spiked. The assistant said the doctor told him, 'Let's not do that again.'
On October 13, Perry got a sample of Sangha's ketamine and
tried it. He and Iwamasa would ask for 25 vials of it, for which he would pay
$5,500. Fleming dropped it off at Perry's house a day later.
On or around October 20 - Perry received his last legal
ketamine treatment from his regular physician, according to what a woman close
to him whose name was redacted in official documents told medical examiner's
investigators.
The woman said his previous doctor had given him treatments
every other day, but his new doctor said Perry was doing well, his depression
was managed, and he no longer needed so many treatments. The woman would tell
investigators that she had believed Perry had been sober for 19 months and
there had been no relapse.
On around October 24, Perry talked to the unidentified woman
for the last time. She told investigators he had been in good spirits.
On October 25, Iwamasa asked Fleming for another 25 vials of
ketamine. After picking up $6,000 from Perry, Fleming picked up the ketamine
from Sangha, who told him her own source is known as Master Chef; meanwhile,
Iwamasa gave Perry at least six shots of ketamine.
On October 26, Iwamasa again gave Perry at least six shots
of ketamine.
On October 27, the assistant again gave the actor at least
six shots of ketamine. With the supply coming from Fleming and Sangha, Perry
and Iwamasa had been out of touch with Plasencia for about two weeks.
Plasencia would text Iwamasa saying he had more to offer: 'I
know you mentioned taking a break. I have been stocking up.'
On October 28, at about 8:30 a.m., acting at Perry's
direction, using syringes from Plasencia and ketamine from Sangha, Iwamasa gave
Perry an injection.
At about 11 a.m., Perry played pickleball, according to what
Iwamasa told medical examiner's investigators later in the day, though many
elements of that initial story changed in his later talks to prosecutors.
About 12:45 p.m., Iwamasa gave Perry his second shot of the
day, and the actor began watching a movie. Shortly before 1:30 p.m., Iwamasa
gave Perry his third and final injection of the day while Perry sat at his
backyard jacuzzi.
'Shoot me up with a big one,' Iwamasa remembered Perry
telling him. The assistant then left to run errands.
At about 4 p.m., Iwamasa returned home to find Perry face
down in the jacuzzi. He jumped in, pulled Perry to the steps and called 911.
Paramedics arrived minutes later and declared Perry dead.
Coroner's investigators would say ketamine was the primary cause of his death,
with drowning a secondary cause.
Iwamasa has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute
Ketamine. Fleming has pleaded guilty to distributing ketamine resulting in
death. Both are cooperating with prosecutors.
Chavez has agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to
distribute the drug. Plasencia and Sangha, the two main targets of the
investigation, have pleaded not guilty to multiple felony counts.
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