Sunday, August 18, 2024 - The doctor accused of supplying the ketamine that killed Matthew Perry realized the actor could die when he saw him 'freeze up' from an overdose just days before his death, prosecutors have claimed.
Dr Salvador Plascencia had a license to prescribe and
administer the powerful tranquillizer but needed help from another medic to
keep pace with the vast amounts the Friends star was consuming in the weeks
before he died in October last year.
Plascencia, 42, showed contempt for Perry asking a crooked
colleague 'I wonder how much this moron will pay', it is alleged.
But he realized the actor's life was hanging by a thread
when he suffered a seizure during an overdose a mere 16 days before he died.
'Let's not do that again,' he told Perry's assistant
nervously.
The shocking details emerged on Thursday as Plascencia and
four other alleged co-conspirators were arrested following a grand jury
indictment.
Perry was found unresponsive in the hot tub of his
LA home on October 28 by his live-in assistant Kenneth Iwamasa. His cause of
death was later determined to be 'the acute effects of ketamine'.
Iwamasa has since admitted being the one who administered
the fatal doses to the actor, after being trained how to deliver them by
Plascencia.
On October 4 Iwamasa reported that he had successfully
injected Perry, noting that he 'found the sweet spot but trying different
places led to running out' of ketamine.
The affidavit claims that Perry spent $55,000 on ketamine
supplied by Plascencia in the two months before he died and that Iwamasa
injected Perry with 27 shots of ketamine in just five days.
San Diego doctor Mark Chavez, 54, has admitted to diverting
supplies from his clinic by filling out fake prescriptions as Plascencia
scrambled to fulfil Perry's orders.
In one instance, Plascenica worked with Chavez to charge
Perry $2,000 for a vial of ketamine that cost $12, after he became increasingly
desperate to get his hands on the drug, according to the filings.
Iwamasa would relay Perry's requests in coded language,
referring to bottles of ketamine as 'Dr. Pepper', 'cans', and 'bots' via
encrypted messaging apps.
At one point he asked if he could pay with 'something
besides cash' because 'it's hard to get to the bank on the fly with all that's
going on which happens so fast now.'
But the doctors struggled to keep up with demand and Iwamasa
turned to a friend of the actor, Eric Fleming, 54, to source extra supplies.
He, in turn, went to Hollywood's alleged 'Ketamine Queen'
Jasveen Sangha, 41, telling Iwamasa 'She only deals with high end and celebs.
If it were not great stuff she'd lose her business.'
Sangha sold dozens of vials of the drug to Iwamasa via
Fleming and was so pleased with the size of his orders that she threw in some
lollipops made of ketamine as an 'add-on'.
But she was well aware of the drug's risks, prosecutors
claim, after allegedly selling it to client Cody McLaury, just hours before his
overdose death in 2019.
'The ketamine you sold my brother killed him,' a furious
relative told her in a text message. 'It's listed as the cause of death.'
Iwamasa had originally relied on Plascencia to inject Perry
in meetings which would usually take place at Perry's home.
But on October 10 the three men met at a car lot in Long
Beach where Plascencia injected Perry inside a parked car.
Two days later Plascencia issued his warning after Perry's
near-fatal overdose but then handed Iwamasa with more bottles before leaving.
As the assistant's expertise developed, Iwamasa was
injecting Perry up to six times a day before finding him dead in his hot tub on
October 28.
When news of the beloved actor's death broke out that
evening, Sangha ordered Fleming to 'delete all our messages'.
But police were on her trail and secured permission to raid
her 'drugs emporium' home in March this year.
Agents found 'significant quantities of illegal drugs,
including approximately 1,978 grams of orange pills that field tested positive
for methamphetamine, 79 bottles containing a clear liquid that field tested
positive for ketamine, and various other suspect narcotics' a court filing
claims.
Prosecutors said Sangha was a 'large volume drug dealer'
previously identified by the DEA, LAPD homicide detectives and the US Postal
Inspection Service.
Analysis of her phone found 'conversations related to selling pressed methamphetamine pills and ketamine'.
And videos recovered from her phone showed her 'cooking
ketamine', a DEA agent wrote.
She faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in
federal prison and a statutory maximum sentence of life imprisonment if
convicted of all charges.
Plascencia is charged with seven counts of distribution of
ketamine and two counts of altering and falsifying documents or records related
to the federal investigation.
He could face up to 10 years in federal prison for each
ketamine-related count and up to 20 years in federal prison for each record's
falsification count.
Fleming admitted to obtaining the ketamine from Sangha and
distributing it to Iwamasa, who admitted then giving the drug to the star.
Iwamasa and Fleming will face up to 15 years and 25 years,
respectively, when they are sentenced in their federal cases.
Chavez has been charged in an information pursuant to a plea
agreement and will be arraigned on August 30. At sentencing, Chavez will face
up to 10 years in federal prison.
'We allege each of the defendants played a key role in his
death by falsely prescribing, selling, or injecting the ketamine that
caused Matthew Perry's tragic death,' said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram.
'Matthew Perry's journey began with unscrupulous doctors who
abused their position of trust because they saw him as a payday, to street
dealers who gave him ketamine in unmarked vials.
The actor had been open about his struggles with substance
abuse.
In 2022, he said he had spent an estimated $9 million
battling his addictions across 15 rehab stays.
He already had a legitimate prescription for ketamine at the
time of his death but had not drawn on it for a week-and-a-half, allowing
prosecutors to conclude that Sangha supplied the ketamine which killed him.
An autopsy found that the amount in Perry's blood was in the
range used for general anaesthesia during surgery, and listed 'the acute
effects of ketamine' as the primary cause of death.
'These defendants cared more about profiting off of Mr Perry
than caring for his well-being,' US attorney Martin Estrada told a press
conference.
'Drug dealers selling dangerous substances are gambling with
other people's lives over greed.
'This case, along with our many other prosecutions of drug
dealers who cause death, send a clear message that we will hold drug dealers
accountable for the deaths they cause.'
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