Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - “FRIENDS” MATTHEW PERRY OD DEATH IN HOT TUB: Doctor to Plead Guilty?
Episode Date: July 19, 2025Matthew Perry wrote about his issues with addiction to alcohol and drugs. In his memoir, he said he began drinking at 14 and was an alcoholic by 18. Perry first went to rehab and completed a 28-day pr...ogram at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation after a jet-ski accident led to an addiction to Vicodin. In his 2022 memoir, "Friends, Lovers, and the Big, Terrible Thing," Perry claimed to have been to rehab 15 times, detoxed 65 times, and spent about $7 to $9 million trying to get sober. After years of addiction, Matthew Perry spent 5-months in the hospital after his colon burst from prolonged opioid abuse. Perry says he was in surgery for seven hours and in a coma for two weeks. Doctors told his family he had a 2% chance of survival. After leaving the hospital, Perry used a colostomy bag for months. Two years after his near-death experience, Matthew Perry goes to a Rehab facility in Switzerland. He wrote that he faked pain symptoms to get Oxycontin during COVID. He was also getting daily Ketamine infusions. While at the facility, Perry needed to have surgery and was given propofol. When he woke up 11 hours later, he found out his heart had stopped for 5 minutes and during the long CPR process 8 of his ribs were broken. The doctor then refused more meds. On October 28, Matthew Perry went to his country club to play a game of Pickleball with friends. Perry returned to his home after the game and was seen by his assistant, who was leaving the house to run errands. At 4 p.m., the assistant returned home and found Perry floating face down in the heated end of the pool. Paramedics pulled Perry out of the pool and pronounced him dead at the scene. Prosecutors have already implicated Jasveen Sangha, known as the "Ketamine Queen," who sold the drug involved in Matthew Perry's death. She is also connected to other customer deaths, and prosecutors believe there are likely more victims given the volume of drugs Sangha sold. Sangha remains in custody without bond in connection with Perry's death. Drug dealer Eric Fleming, who reportedly served as a program director at the Bel-Air rehab Red Door, also had a resident die of an overdose while under his watch. Court documents reveal the close ties between Sangha, Fleming, and assistant Kenneth Iwamasa. Iwamasa told Fleming he "cleaned up the scene" by disposing of ketamine vials and syringes and "deleted everything." Fleming then informed Sangha that he believed they were protected since he never dealt with Perry directly, only through Iwamasa, who would be considered Perry's "enabler." In their communications, Sangha and Fleming refer to Perry using the code name "Chandler." The doctor directly implicated in Matthew Perry’s ketamine overdose, Dr. Salvador Plasencia, now agreeds to plead guilty for his part in Perry's death. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
TV superstar Matthew Perry, dead of a drug overdose in his hot tub.
The star of Friends, his doctor now agrees to plead guilty in Matthew Perry's tragic ketamine overdose death.
What happened?
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
Thank you for being with us.
In the last days, Friends star Matthew Perry's doctor, Dr. Salvador Plasencia, agrees to plead guilty
for counts ketamine distribution following Perry's shock death.
Plasencia, nicknamed Dr. P, faces a statutory maximum sentence of 40 years in federal prison. Now, as of right now, he has not entered that plea, but he
says he agrees to plea guilty. Will he do it? This leaves only the Ketamine Queen, Javine
Sanga, as a defendant who has not taken a plea deal. First of all, let's start with disgraced Dr. Dr. Plasencia.
What happened to Matthew Perry? First of all, the same way I like to start every
jury trial, let me start with the 911 call. Listen. You can't tell a lot, but I learned something significant.
Let's hear that one more time, Sid.
Now some of those numbers are universal.
Sometimes you hear numbers across a police band or on an EMS that are specific to that region. But what
I'm hearing that really jumps out at me is response to the drowning.
So at the beginning, it was believed that the Friends Star died of drowning because that's what
was reported to them.
But what do we really know?
Take a listen to our friends at Crime Online.
The Los Angeles medical examiner determined
that 54-year-old Matthew Perry died
from the acute effects of ketamine.
Other contributing factors listed were drowning,
coronary artery disease, and the effects of buprenorphine.
Buprenorphine is used to treat opioid use disorder.
The manner of death has been ruled an accident.
Okay, see, I'm a trial lawyer,
and that is why the medical examiners
and everybody at the crime lab would go hide
under their desk when they saw my beat up Honda pulling up
because they knew I was going to go through it line
by line, literally, to make sense of what they wrote down in their scientific findings.
What acute effects of ketamine, other contributing factors were drowning, coronary artery disease,
buprenfra, bluh, bluh, bluh, used to treat opioid disorder, manner of death accident.
There's so much there.
I could do a whole flow chart on that to try to explain all that to a jury.
Luckily, we have experts with us.
But first, I want to go to a special guest joining us.
Miguel Melendez joining us.
Senior writer for ET Entertainment Tonight.
Miguel, what a pleasure to have you on.
Man, this sent shockwaves through not only Hollywood but across our country because,
I'm going to follow this up with our shrink, Karen Stark. We think we know Matthew Perry. Why? Because
we've seen him on the big screen, we've seen him on the little screen, we follow him in the tabloids,
we think we know him and about his life.
We've been following his struggle with addiction and a lot of people can identify with that. If
you haven't had that struggle and somebody you know, somebody close to you has had that struggle.
So Matthew Perry was kind of like every man that was struggling with a lot. But to you Miguel Melendez,
I want to go before I get into Matthew Perry himself and how it ended up this way. I want to
talk to you about what happened, what surrounded the discovery of Matthew Perry dead in a hot tub,
leading up to that. Tell me about the discovery and what came out at the time
that he was first discovered dead in the hot tub. Right, so what we know the timeline is that at 11 a.m
Matthew had played pickleball. At 1 37 p.m is when Matthew was last known to be alive by his personal
live-in assistant who lived with him in the Pacific Palisades home. He was off to run errands at 1.37 p.m.
The living assistant returned home
and found Matthew floating face down in the jacuzzi.
The assistant jumped into the pool,
moved Matthew into the sitting position
on the steps of the pool,
and found him, by the way, on the heated side of the pool,
called 911.
Paramedics arrived and they pulled Matthew out of the pool.
Okay, hold on,
Miguel, you're giving me so much information so quickly, I'm drinking from the fire hydrant.
Because Miguel, you know, I like to dissect every single sentence and I loved everything you just
said as far as factually what I'm learning. Could you say it again and very slowly? Okay,
did you say the live-in assistant found him? Yes why didn't Matthew Perry have a live-in assistant that I can't answer
you Nancy I don't know the exact circumstances what led to that I do know
that the live-in assistant based on this report is that he administered the
detox drug on Matthew twice a day that That's important, Miguel Melendez.
Hold on, Miguel, hold the thought.
Guys, with me, he's a senior writer
for Entertainment Tonight.
You all know him, Miguel Melendez,
giving us everything we need to know
to analyze this drug, ketamine,
that claimed the life of Matthew Perry.
Karen L. Stark joining me,
renowned TV radio trauma expert at karenstark.com.
Karen with a C if you're trying to find her.
Karen, so is it like a minder you have with AA?
That, I don't think they call it a minder.
They call it something else.
Someone that checks in on you.
It's like your partner, your buddy. that's who you call when you have a problem or you're gonna relapse.
Is that what you think is happening here? He had somebody to help him? It's called
a sponsor and his assistant, she was his sponsor, she was his minder as you said
Nancy, so she was there.
She could not stop him from taking something, but certainly was trying.
That was her role to make sure that he was on the straight and narrow and sticking to
his determination to stop.
And he was very open about it, but he really did want to stop taking drugs recreationally.
He really did, and he made no secret about it.
What led up to that moment Miguel Melendez is describing?
But first again, Miguel, could you tell me the assistant comes in, you said he was near
the heater end of the hot tub?
Correct. So at 4pm, the live-in assistant walks in from Running
errands, finds Matthew Perry floating face down in the jacuzzi
in the heated end of the pool. The assistant jumped into the
pool, moved Matthew into the sitting position on the steps of
the pool and called 911. Paramedic soon arrived, pulled Matthew out of the pool,
onto the grass, where he was pronounced dead at the scene.
You know, I think I had it bass aqua, Miguel Melendez.
I was saying hot tub because I've read jacuzzi,
but was the jacuzzi or the hot tub part of the pool?
Was he in a pool or was he in a hot tub or jacuzzi? It looked like it was a long
pool that has a jacuzzi in it. They're not two separate. Okay, that makes perfect sense. Okay,
guys, what led up to this moment? Take a listen to our friend Nicole Parton. Matthew Perry went to
his country club to play a game of pickleball with friends around 11 a.m.
Perry returned to his home after the game and was seen by his assistant who was
leaving the house to run errands at 1 37 p.m.
At four o'clock p.m.
The assistant returned to the home.
Investigator Jennifer Herzog says the assistant found Perry floating face down
in the heated end of the pool.
The assistant jumped into the pool and moved him into a sitting position on the steps and
called 911.
Paramedics responded, pulled Perry out of the pool and onto the grass and pronounced
him dead on the scene at 417 PM.
His stepfather, Keith Morrison, is listed as the informant, which means the Dateline
host is who identified
Perry to authorities.
Oh my goodness, that must have been so horrible on the stepfather to have to do that after
the struggle Matthew Perry went through so publicly against substance abuse.
Mike McCormick joining me out of LA, owner, lead investigator, MCM Investigations.
Mike McCormick, thank you for being with us.
I'm very curious. Matthew Perry had been so open and public about his battle with addiction. Who,
I mean, even I know about that, 2000 miles away, who would be supplying him drugs, ketamine and all the other things in his system?
It was either prescribed to him, the ketamine was prescribed or he's getting it off the
street.
There's only several ways of doing it.
My understanding is that the, uh, from his assistant or past girlfriend, Miss Edwards,
that she's been involved with him off and on from about 2006,
and she used to purchase his drugs off the street for him.
So the ketamine and other drugs he may have been taking
could come from either source.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
I understand how he died and why he died, but what did Dr. P. Salvador Placencia have to do with it?
Federal prosecutors allege that Perry first obtains ketamine from an unscrupulous doctor aiming to take advantage of the actor's addiction issues.
Dr. Salvador Placencia teaches Perry's live-in assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, how to administer the drug and provides ketamine to both Perry and Iwamasa at exorbitant prices. When the drugs become too expensive,
Perry and Iwamasa turn to street dealers,
including Jasveen Songha, dubbed the ketamine queen.
What?
In last hours, a very dear and intimate friend
of Matthew Perry says she doesn't think
that ketamine is the cause of death.
Why?
And what would be the cause of death?
And what leads her to say that?
This is what the medical examiner has to say.
The Los Angeles medical examiner determined
that 54-year-old Matthew Perry died
from the acute effects of ketamine.
Other contributing factors listed were drowning,
coronary artery disease, and the effects of buprenorphine.
Buprenorphine is used to treat opioid use disorder.
The manner of death has been ruled an accident.
Joining us in an All-Star panel to make sense of what we're learning right now, but with
me, a special guest, Rowena Chu, activist and former assistant to Harvey Weinstein. His name tastes like dirt in my mouth.
Convicted on multiple rapes and she has just written a New York Times guest essay. I was a
celebrity assistant. The power imbalance is very real. Rowena Chiu, thank you for being with us. I enjoyed your article. I read it
several times over. And I try to compare what you're saying and your situation with Harvey
Weinstein, may he rot in hell, to Matthew Perry's assistant. Number one, Matthew Perry
was not a criminal and was not a rapist, number one.
But you point out assistants often do things that are, let me just say, legally and ethically
questionable.
In your case, what does that mean?
In my case, I worked for Harvey for only a couple of months, and so I didn't have the
opportunity to do things that were ethically and legally immoral.
But I was making the point that the power imbalance is so huge that assistants don't
get the chance to say no.
You also pointed out a quote that compared assistants that may do illegal acts or unethical acts to the
guards at Auschwitz that they knew what was happening was wrong and you make a
very subtle yet important distinction. Explain.
The comparison was really with ordinary folks that lived in Nazi Germany, whether
or not you can hold them accountable for the events that happened in the country.
So I'm really making a point about bystanders that don't have any real
power themselves, and they are essentially invisible, or they don't have
an identity of their own, and they don't have the autonomy to make decisions. And so I feel that celebrity assistants, I also called them butlers,
I constantly felt that I was invisible, I had no autonomy, I frequently didn't really have a name
of my own. I would call people up and say, I'm calling from Harvey Weinstein's office, but I
wouldn't mention my own name, because I was that insignificant. So when you're in a power
balance where you're that insignificant, I think it is
incredibly difficult to be then thrust into the spotlight and
held responsible for something as serious as somebody's death. I
think that I am attempting to shed light on the fact that
Kenneth Iwamasa may have had absolutely zero choice in a way that the ordinary
person can't understand. He was a living assistant. The power imbalance would have been enormous.
At the end of your article, I noted that you stated it is often too easy to turn the Butler into the scapegoat. Do you believe that Matthew Perry's assistant
who injected him with that deadly dose is a scapegoat?
I think he might have been put
in an incredibly difficult situation.
Not only was his employment on the line,
but likely his involvement in the industry as a whole.
It could have been that he did not have another residence. And so as a live-in assistant, really there's a power bank
dynamic on many different levels. I also think in the Weinstein case, at least, that there were many
circles of power enablement and entitlement that were far more deserving of perhaps the legal system
going after them than assistants. For example, Harvey Weinstein had accountants and board members
that certainly knew of what was happening. So I think the assistants, I'm merely making the
point that the assistants, I suppose, are the lowest rung on the ladder. And I think to hold
them accountable and responsible for
the actions taken by a celebrity doesn't take into account the enormous power difference
between a celebrity and his assistant. Rowena Chiu is joining us. Activist, former assistant
to Harvey Weinstein, who has just written a guest essay for the Times titled, I Was
a Celebrity. Assistant, the power imbalance is very real.
Ms. Chi, I deeply respect you and what you have to say and your viewpoint, and I highly,
highly disagree with you. In your case or some other assistants, not necessarily Weinstein's other assistants. Comparing that to what Iwamasa did in Perry's case, knowing that he had had seizures just
16 days where he was unable to move or speak after a ketamine injection, knowing that,
I consider this much, much more serious.
But I'll circle back to you, Miss Chew, in just one moment.
And again, I do appreciate what you're saying,
but I find it vastly, vastly different
than the case of Matthew Perry's assistant.
Speaking of the facts, let's go to Kayla Brantley,
joining us, investigative reporter with The Daily Mail,
who's been on this case from the very, very beginning.
What I find very interesting right now
is that it's all business as usual.
Matthew Perry dies in the hot tub with a fatal overdose.
The doctor, he had to put up like $100,000 bond.
Really?
That's $10,000 in regular people talk.
You put up 10%.
He's gone. He's out.
The so-called ketamine queen has not been sentenced. The assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa,
has not been sentenced. Why? I think that the feds... Have you ever seen a cat with a little
mouse just back and forth and back and forth until it bites its head off?
I think that's what the feds are doing right now.
They're playing, toying with the various defendants in order to get them to talk.
To name other celebrity doctors and other pill mills headed by doctors in LA and other
celebrities.
I think that's what's happening.
But you kill a Brantley Daily Mail, tell me the latest.
We've got the doctor back to work.
A lot of people haven't been sentenced.
The other celebrity doctors, including one
that just got shot in the last day, a celebrity doctor,
he was assassinated in his parking lot following all of the
drama surrounding Matthew Perry's death and what's being uncovered. Hamid
Mershoye was shot in his parking lot. He was a celeb doctor focusing on
addiction. But I bet a lot of celebrities and ALS doctors are quaking in their
boots right now, Keala.
What's happening?
Yeah, Nancy.
So what we know so far, at least when it comes to Matthew Perry, is that Dr. Salvador Profecia,
he is back practicing.
He is forbidden by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the DEA, and prescribing controlled substances.
He turned over his license that would let him prescribe, but he can still practice medicine
under certain conditions. He works at an urgent care in Malibu. And the only difference now is
that his patients have to sign a written consent form for treatment that basically acknowledges
and discloses that he is under investigation. It lets them know what's going on, but his patients
can still see him. He can still practice.
The only difference is that he cannot provide lethal doses of ketamine as he is alleged
to have done to Matthew Perry.
And the same goes for Dr. Mark Chavez, who has also surrendered his DEA license and therefore
cannot prescribe the controlled substances. However, these men are out, able to practice, able
to continue living their daily lives. As you said, Dr. Plasencia put up a hundred thousand
dollars bond and he's out, but they will have to wait for something and see if they can
continue to live their life or if they'll face music.
Continue to live their life. Kayla Bradley, Daily Mail.
Matthew Perry can't live his life and he's not the only one.
We now have identified two potential suspects, two potential victims, other victims of the
Ketamine Queen, both dead.
But right now to Mike McCormick, owner, lead investigator, MCM Investigations, former LAPD, over 25 years.
You can find him at MCMMmother, C Corpus, mmotherinvestigations.com. Mike, really?
Yeah.
Boo hoo. He can't prescribe control substances. That's his punishment. he's back and his fancy sports car and
his fancy condo and his fancy office to the stars making money hand over fist he
can't prescribe DEA controlled substances I guess not but you know what
he can do he can illicitly get another doctor, a straw doctor, as it were,
to write those prescriptions for him. Let me think of an example. Okay, psychologists cannot prescribe certain medications, right? They can't. They work in tandem with a psychiatrist
and they get the psychiatrist to write the prescription.
See what I mean?
So he can be doing that.
He can have a straw doc actually write the prescriptions.
This is such BS.
Why is he not in a jail cell? Perry is dead. And you know what? Everybody's talking
about his net worth. In fact, his home is being remodeled near the hot tub. Man, that's
going right on the market. It's like it never happened.
Exactly. Exactly. This is an outcome of a linear justice system.
Joining me, psychoanalyst to the stars, Dr. Bethany Marshall, author of Dealbreaker. And you can
also see her on Peacock and find her at drbethanymarshall.com. Dr. Bethany, I want to
circle back with you about how this doctor continued treating celebrity
patients with the use of a straw doctor, how easy that would be.
But we now know this doctor, this doctor knew very well that Matthew Perry had actually
seized up.
In other words, he could not speak or move for an extended period of
time just 16 days before he died. Yet everything was business as usual.
Listen. Details of Perry's last days in a federal indictment reveal it was very
clear to Dr. Placentia that Perry's ketamine injections were causing a total
loss of awareness. The indictment documents three
separate occasions where Perry froze up after receiving the medication with Placentia commenting,
let's not do that again. Defendant Placentia knew full well the danger of what he was doing.
In fact, on one occasion he injected Mr. Perry with ketamine and he saw Mr. Perry freeze up
and his blood pressure spike. Despite that, he left additional vials of ketamine for defendant
Iwamasa to administer to Mr. Perry. And he's free. If you or I caused the death of a superstar like Matthew Perry, we would be under the
jail.
So why is he free?
And why is it very murky, very unclear as to the status of the other defendants?
Because the feds are squeezing them to talk.
That's why.
Joining me, Todd Barr, Dr. Todd Barr, board certified anatomic clinical forensic pathologist.
I'm very curious.
Oh yes, he's also featured in Thin Places Essays, Essays from In Between.
Doctor, thank you for being with us.
I've been researching and investigating what exactly happened to Matthew Perry when he
quote froze up.
That's hardly a medical description, but I've learned that there was apparently a significant
spike in his systolic blood pressure.
What does that mean?
Hi Nancy.
Thank you. So a spike in his systolic blood pressure
just means that he is having a hypertensive crisis. His blood pressure is elevated to a point.
Okay, right there. Right there. What do you mean hypertensive crisis? That means his blood pressure
is at a high level, such a high level that it could cause death. I mean, people die from extreme fluctuations in their blood pressure.
Blood pressure is supposed to live in an average, in a normal range.
If you get too high, it's hypertensive.
If you get too low, it's hypotensive.
And either of those, hyper or hypo, can cause death.
So when he, quote, froze up, what does that indicate to you?
Is that some sort of a stroke or a near stroke?
What's a systolic spike in blood pressure?
I would say the term froze up to me sounds more like a seizure like activity, like a
tonic clonic seizure where the muscles contract and you
get into this.
Ketamine is actually known for its anti convulsive properties.
It's used to treat seizures, but in high doses, it can actually cause seizures.
And as we know by the reports that are out there, Mr. Perry was administered extremely
high doses of this drug ketamine, which is an anesthetic drug.
He was actually found with levels that were compatible with surgery and anesthesia that
you would need for surgical procedures.
It reminds me a great deal of Conrad Murray injecting Michael Jackson with propofol and
it took hell and high water to get Conrad Murray charged and convicted.
But even that conviction was not enough to send sufficient shockwaves
through the Celebrity Doctor Network in Hollywood and now Matthew Perry is dead.
You know, it's Kayla Brantley is joining me, investigative reporter with The Daily Mail.
Kayla, I understand that the doctor who is now living a life, he's not in jail, like everybody else would be connected to a death,
he would provide the medication,
the ketamine, along with ketamine queen,
for the assistant to make at home ketamine injections.
Now I heard what Rowena Chiu said that the power balance
is way off, but shouldn't you know instinctively, especially after Perry was
having seizures just days before, that you should not be injecting ketamine to
Matthew Perry at home.
I mean, this assistant needs to be in jail
along with the doctor and the ketamine queen,
the street supplier.
They all need to be in jail
and we need to know their sentences.
So what's happening, Kayla?
I don't understand.
What's the holdup?
Right, well, Nathie, I also want to break down
exactly how much ketamine was
distributed to Matthew Perry.
The doctors Chavez and Placencia
distributed 20 vials of ketamine
to Perry for $55,000 in cash.
That's charging him $2000 for a vial,
and that vial cost Doctor Chavez
just $12 so you can imagine how
much money they were making off
Terry and that's the how much money they were making
off Perry and that's the point
that the prosecutors were making.
Now the Ketamine Queen Sanga,
she sold about 50 vials of the drugs to Perry
with Fleming delivering the product
that they're selling Fleming, the Hollywood producer.
And they sold it to him for $11,000.
So these people were making a lot of money
off of Perry's addiction and they
clearly knew as you said he was seizing up and then you had the person who was injecting
him who was his trusted assistant. So you make a great point that you know these people
should be held accountable and that's exactly what the prosecutors are trying to do.
They distributed approximately 20 vials of ketamine to Mr. Perry in exchange for $55,000 in cash.
Defendant Placentia saw this as an opportunity to profit off of Mr. Perry.
He wrote in a text message in September 2023, quote, I wonder how much this moron will pay.
He also stated in text messages that he wanted to be Mr.
Perry's sole source of supply. He wrote in a text message that he wanted to be Mr. Perry's quote,
go-to for drugs. Matthew Perry's assistant allegedly found Perry in similar circumstances two times in the same week
of his tragic death.
Joining us Rowena Chiu,
former assistant to Harvey Weinstein
who just wrote a New York Times guest essay,
I was a celebrity assistant,
the power imbalance is very real.
You just heard other examples
that celebrity assistants have named. Do you believe that in this
case the assistant is being scapegoated or do you believe he is rightfully being
prosecuted as it relates to Matthew Perry's death? I do believe he's being
scapegoated. I mean we just heard about how other players in this system are
making insane amounts of money and I asked you to think about
what does the assistant stand to gain?
In that equation-
What does the money have to do with it Rowena?
Would it make it okay if he was paid more money?
Oh no, absolutely not.
I'm not saying that anybody was doing anything right.
However, there's a big difference
between the amounts of money the doctors
and the drug dealers were making
and what did the assistant stand to gain.
I believe the assistant was just trying to survive. He wasn't making staggering amounts of money the doctors and the drug dealers were making, and what did the assistant stand to gain? I believe the assistant was just trying to survive. He wasn't making staggering
amounts of money. And so therefore his incentive to do what he did was very different from
the doctors and the drug dealers. He wasn't out there trying to get something for himself.
He was merely trying to survive his job. There's a big difference in that.
So you believe the difference in whether he should be held criminally culpable is whether
he was getting paid for shooting Matthew Perry up to his death?
I don't think that there's a huge incentive for him to push this agenda.
And therefore, I don't believe that he was pushing the agenda.
He was merely doing what he was told to do under incredibly strenuous circumstances.
So I'm merely saying that as a point of coercion, the assistant is not really the person who
should be scapegoated.
That there are layers of privilege and abuse of power that are far greater than that.
And you know, we can easily point to doctors and drug dealers who were making vast amounts
of money and had a huge incentive to push this kind of an agenda.
And are actually still making vast amounts of money.
Mike McCormick, joining me, leading investigator of MCM investigations in Hollywood.
Mike McCormick, all respect to Rowena Chu, but I think that's complete BS.
I don't agree at all.
Everybody in Hollywood is making money off celebs.
Celebs are making money off the studios.
The studios are making money off us and advertisers.
That's how it works in Hollywood.
It's like one bloodsucker sucking on the next bloodsucker just like ticks, you know, stuck to the animal.
But Mike McCormick, why aren't they in jail, number one? And what do you
make of what Rowena is saying that the assistant is the scapegoat? I think they should all
be put in the same pot to boil and all be tried together as it relates to Perry's death. Well, I don't think the assistant is being scapegoated.
I just think he was being more loyal,
just doing what the boss wanted him to do.
It had nothing to do with money,
it was job security and loyalty.
Okay, hold on just a moment.
Dr. Bethany Marshall,
maybe I'm not articulating my point that well.
The assistant lives in a mansion,
he makes plenty of money,
he rubs elbows with all of the stars,
he drives a beautiful luxury car.
Maybe I'm not understanding his poor conditions.
I don't see it.
Nancy, I have a unique perspective on this because these assistants sometimes come to
my office. One in particular was the major domo for one of the wealthiest men in the
world and had to stand around serving palomas to the family all day long, alcoholic beverages.
And he became so disgusted because one of the family members was drunk all day long.
He was traumatized.
He came to therapy and said, I just cannot do this anymore.
And he left the job.
So, yes, these assistants are vulnerable
in the sense that they often do things they don't want to do.
But they do have agency in the world.
And I think in particular, when you are potentially committing homicide,
that's a breach of duty, that's lack of judgment that a 10-year-old knows not to do, right? We just
know basically you don't kill somebody. If you administer a drug, they seize, you don't administer
the drug again. I mean, I'm sorry, but this assistant could have gone and worked at a bar.
I would prefer to scrub floors than to inject somebody with a substance that could kill
them.
It is just common sense.
Of course there's a power imbalance.
Of course there's a power imbalance in life for all of us.
Exactly. You know, Kayla Brantley, I want to follow up on what Dr. Bethany is saying,
Kayla Brantley joining us from Daily Mail. Kayla, we understand that Matthew Perry's
mansion is being renovated, especially around the hot tub, the pool area where he died.
It seems as if for Hollywood, including the prosecutors, it's just business as usual.
The doctor is back in his clinic treating patients, making a ton of money.
There are no sentences on the people that have agreed to plead guilty.
It just seems as if everyone's acting as if nothing happened.
Matthew Perry is dead. These people, according to the feds, are responsible.
Why aren't they behind bars, Kayla? And what, if anything, can you tell me about when these people are going to jail. And one other question.
Apparently one of Perry's intimate friends
states that he, Perry, was deathly afraid of needles.
And she is questioning the real COD killer.
Listen.
One of Perry's former assistants and ex-girlfriend,
Katie Edwards, says she does not believe Perry could have possibly been taking ketamine. the response, quote, You only die when you use needles and I would never ever do that. Kellebrantley, what about it?
This person, an intimate friend of Perry's, raising the specter of another
COD cause of death.
I understand that Nancy, but it was Katie Edwards.
She dated him back in 2006, worked as his assistant until like 2011.
So while they were still friends, they hadn't dated in a while.
And I understand that she said that he had a fear of this but Matthew
Perry himself had written in his book about these ketamine infusions that he
was taking and how it felt and how it was helping him. So I personally am not
so sure of that theory and you do have his assistant and everyone basically admitting to injecting
him.
And back to your point of why aren't these people, you know, behind bars and what's going
on.
I think right now it's just a waiting game.
We have had plea deals, which have gotten us more information from the assistant, from
the friend, from one of the doctors.
So I think we will be seeing more in due time.
There will be a sentence.
They will end up facing the consequences of their actions.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
Dr. P, Dr. Plasencia, has also been charged
with altering and falsifying documents or
records in connection with a federal investigation.
Now, with the expected guilty plea, he joins three others who have pled guilty in connection
with the death of Matthew Perry, and they are Dr. Mark Chavez,
Perry's assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, and Eric Fleming, an acquaintance of the
Friends star. The so-called ketamine queen, Jovene Sanga, the only one who has
not taken a plea deal. What is her connection to the death of Matthew Perry?
Did the drug dealer, dubbed the Ketamine Queen, refer to Matthew Perry by his friend's character
name?
And that would be his affinity, Matthew Perry's affinity with Batman, and he would call himself Mat-Man.
But according to sources, the so-called Ketamine Queen, Jasveen Songhart referred to him as
Chandler in their texts and emails when they would talk about drugs and drug deliveries.
Codename Chandler.
Wow, that was a toughie. Apparently, celebrities
and celebrity doctors alike across Hollywood are quaking in their boots, afraid that the
so-called Ketamine Queen is going to rat them out in exchange for a sweetheart deal from
the feds. The so-called K ketamine queen, the one that supplied Matthew
Perry with the deadly dose of ketamine that ended in his death.
Are there other victims?
Yes.
Listen.
Jasveen Sangha sells Cody McLaury several vials of ketamine.
Later that same day, McLaury's family finds him dead.
A family member tells Sangha her ketamine caused McLaury's overdose death, and Sangha the William Cooney, 36, was found dead of a fentanyl overdose in his bathroom at the facility. So those are two alleged victims, two more victims of the Ketamine Queen.
That makes three, if those two victims are to be believed.
In fact, Cody's family is speaking out against the Ketamine Queen.
And is she talking, is she making a deal with the feds to get a light sentence in exchange for ratting out other celebs and other doctors?
Man, she needs a lot of money to support this lifestyle.
So what is the connection between the Ketamine Queen and the other alleged victims all dead?
Coming to light are Brogue Mueller's deep ties to suspects Fleming and Songha. Queen and the other alleged victims all dead.
Coming to light are Brogue Mueller's deep ties to suspects Fleming and Songha.
Mueller spent time with Songha in one of her many rehab stints and Fleming is reportedly
a godfather to one of Mueller's children.
Mueller reportedly pressured then-boyfriend William Cooney to join her at Powell Fleming's
rehab program where Cooney overdosed and died.
Mueller may well have introduced Fleming and Songha
to Perry as shortcuts to feed his addiction.
Federal prosecutors report that Mueller is cooperating
with the investigation and is not facing any charges.
Let me understand, Kayla Brantley joining us
from DailyMail.com, the so-called ketamine queen,
Songha, meets up with who in rehab. Now let me see, it's Brooke Mueller, who apparently
was very close to Matthew Perry. Now how does that connect in to Songha, the dealer?
Well, all roads are kind of leading back to Jasmine Songha, the Ketamine Queen. She was
a supplier of multiple people. And now we do find this connection between
Brooke Mueller, who spent time with Matthew Perry in rehab. They were close friends. And
then we have Eric Fleming, who was a director at the rehab center where this man William
Cooney had passed away. So it's all a circular connection of going back to Sangha. And Sangha has been
on the radar for a while. Back in March 2024, the feds raided her house and they called
it a drug emporium. They seized 79 bottles that some had tested positive for ketamine.
So this is no surprise that Jazmine Sanga is involved in this Matthew Perry case now.
Two more alleged victims of this woman living the high life that supplied the deadly dose
to Matthew Perry.
Now would he be her third victim?
Why has it taken that to bring her to justice?
Are those investigations ongoing now?
This by far is not the first time a celebrity has died with enablers circling them like
vultures.
Listen. Whitney Houston She was conscious of breathing it off? Apparently she wasn't breathing and she's a 46-year-old. She was not breathing? Yeah.
Whitney Houston is surrounded by enablers.
Ultimately it cost her her life.
Then there is John Belushi, one of the greatest comedians that ever lived.
He was shot up with drugs at the Chateau Marmont and his assistant did hard jail time after
shooting him up.
Bobby Christina, Whitney's daughter, OD.
It goes on and on and on.
Of course, Michael Jackson, Aaron Carter,
Chris Farley went to rehab 16 times.
His younger brother finds him dead in his apartment.
Of course, Prince died of
a deadly opioid injection. It goes all the way back to Elvis. China, Amy Winehouse, Anna
Nicole spiraled down a drug hole while everyone supported that and enabled her. Kurt Cobain, River Phoenix. It
goes on and on and the enablers are never brought to justice. Straight out to Mike McCormick,
MCM Investigations. Don't you know the Ketamine Queen and all of them, they're like rats on a sinking ship,
are ready to deal, ready to name names, addresses, phone numbers, little black books to save
their own skin.
You don't think they're talking to the feds right now?
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah.
They're going to tell them everything they want to know. Just stay out of jail. To Todd Barr joining us, Dr. Barr, board certified anatomic clinical forensic pathologist.
Dr. Barr, what do you notice about the death certificate?
So Nancy, I have a lot of real issues with the way this case was decided.
As a forensic expert, I have been involved in prosecutions of
crimes that involved other people distributing or administering drugs to a
victim. The very definition of a homicide is death at the hands of another, period.
Whether it's by omission or commission. In this case, commission, they brought in drugs,
they injected them into Matthew Perry's body.
They should be charged with a homicide.
They should be charged with murder straight up.
Everyone that's involved.
Now, the second part of this is the official cause of death
was listed as the acute effects of ketamine.
And then other conditions or
contributing conditions included drowning. Now there are certain stigmata of drowning
that you see at autopsy. If those are present, then a drowning occurred. So Matthew Perry's
death is literally because of drowning, but then there's a part B, or drowning due to the intoxicating effects of ketamine.
So he was so dissociative and anesthetized
that he slipped under the water.
If they're gonna list drowning as a contributing factor,
then that means they had evidence that he drowned.
So it should have been listed as a drowning number one
due to
the effects of ketamine and the manner of death should have been listed as homicide.
So I have a very strong opinion about the way this death certificate was worded. And
I believe that sometimes when it's worded this way, defendants get off a lot easier.
Now I don't know if in LA they have something going where they
word these death certificates in a way so people get off a little easier but
that's my take. To Rowena Chu joining us, former assistant to Harvey Weinstein, now
activist, who has just written a New York Times guest essay called I was a
celebrity assistant the power imbalance is a very real thought to you Rowena.
What do you make of it all? I think there are levels of power that we could go The power imbalance is a very real thought to you Rowena.
What do you make of it all?
I think there are levels of power that we could go after that are much more intense than that of the assistant.
I think the assistant being the lowest rung on the ladder probably is the last person that anyone should go after
because he has very little autonomy.
I'm not saying that no one should be held accountable.
I'm saying that there are levels of power above him that should be accountable before he is. Will Dr P plead guilty or will he go to trial along
with the so-called Ketamine Queen? We wait as justice unfolds. Goodbye friend.
