Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - 'FRIENDS' STAR MATTHEW PERRY SUSPECT KILLER DOCTOR ESCAPES JAIL TIME IN HOLLYWOOD FIASCO
Episode Date: January 17, 2026One of the doctors who pleaded guilty to supplying ketamine to actor Matthew Perry, leading to his overdose death, avoids jail time, being sentenced to eight months of home confinement. Judge She...rilyn Peace Garnett also sentenced Dr. Mark Chavez to three years of supervised release. Chavez is the second of the five defendants to be sentenced in connection with Perry’s death. In his 2022 memoir, "Friends, Lovers, and the Big, Terrible Thing," Matthew Perry claimed to have been to rehab 15 times, detoxed 65 times, and spent about $7 to $9 million trying to get sober. Two years after his near-death experience, Matthew Perry went to a rehab facility in Switzerland. He admitted to faking pain symptoms to get OxyContin during COVID. He was also getting daily Ketamine infusions. Ultimately, it was Ketamine that killed him. 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. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
It never ends with Hollywood Justice.
Matthew Perry, the star of the iconic Friends series, dead in his hot tub because of doctors and enablers, that allowed him to die.
Yes, he bears some responsibility too.
We know that.
But what about the others that let it happen, that made it happen?
They are skating justice.
Is it because they're rich, high profile, or just part of the Hollywood Maylew?
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
I want to thank you for being with us.
That's right.
In the last days, Matthew Perry's ketamine doctor skates, escapes jail, and a shock ruling
as the court hears how he is driving.
Uber for a living so good. That is a blessing to him to drive Uber for a living. He should be
mopping floors in the penitentiary. Matthew Perry is dead because of him. And I wonder how
many other people he prescribed ketamine two. One of the doctors caught up in a criminal fallout
surrounding the friend's legend Matthew Perry's ketamine death, some would call it a murder,
has avoided jail time. What actually happened to Matthew Perry?
Let me start with the 911 call. Listen.
Yes, it's a 23. 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 ban 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,
Buprefer, blah, blah, blue, blue, 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'm going 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 of 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 living assistant who lived with him in the Pacific
Palisite home. He was off to run errands at 137 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 very slowly?
Okay.
Did you say the live-in assistant found him?
Yes.
Okay.
Why did Matthew Perry have a live-in assistant?
That I can answer you, Nancy.
I don't know the exact circumstances of what led to that.
I do know that the living assistant based on this report is that he administered the detox drug on Matthew twice a day.
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, a renowned TV radio trauma expert at Karen Stark.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 going to 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 arrow
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 4 p.m., the living
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. Paramedics soon arrived,
pulled Matthew out of the pool onto the grass where he was pronounced that at the scene.
You know, I think I had it bass aquares, 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? 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 too 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 4 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 4.17 p.m. His son,
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 L.A. 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, 2,000 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, uh, Ms. Edwards,
that she's been involved with him off and on from about 2006.
And she used to purchase his drugs off the street, uh, for him.
So, uh, the ketamine and other, uh, drugs he may have been taking, uh, could come from me
source.
Crime stories with
Nancy Grace.
When I say he's
skated jail, boy did he, Mark Chavez,
the second of two doctors
who are convicted with
in connection to Matthew Perry's death,
was
sentenced to just eight
months of home
confinement.
Even though he faced the likelihood
of at least
10 years
behind bars.
He pled guilty. There's no question
he did it. He pled guilty to
one count conspiracy to distribute ketamine.
He admits he fraudulently
sold and obtained
ketamine
to a fellow doctor,
Salvador Placincia.
I mean, what does it take? The man
admitted. He might as well
to hold a gun to Matthew
Perry's head and pull the trigger.
What happened that night?
Matthew Perry's hot tub. Is that true? I don't know that. Is that true? And can that be corroborated
that an ex-girlfriend would score drugs for him? Well, I don't know that the girlfriend and the
assistant are the same people. I do know that there was a girlfriend who was his assistant at one time.
And she has gone on record and asked that, you know, the doctors be investigated if they were the
ones who supplied the ketamine. Now, she's gone on record and said that if that, if that
that happened and then this investigation needs to happen.
But whether the assistant and this ex-girlfriend are the same people,
it doesn't seem to indicate that that's what happened based on the investigation
and the details that are in the medical examiner's report.
Um, the assistant, this is Wendy Patrick.
It looks like the assistant, it was living with Matthew Perry at the time of his
death as a man named Kenny, uh,
right, uh, not, not the prior, not a prior girlfriend or a female.
assistant. You're right, Wendy Patrick.
Guys, you're here in California prosecutor and author of
why bad looks good.
Wendy Patrick at Wendypatrick PhD.com,
the star of today with Dr. Wendy on KCBQ.
I was just coming to you, Wendy, on another point, a legal point.
And that is, I saw the trial go down.
I don't know if you remember Archie Bunker of all in the family.
Oh, yeah.
When his son died of an overdose, he went after the supply.
in the Fulton County Courthouse.
And I was just wondering, Wendy, about people knowing about his public struggle against
addiction.
I mean, he wrote about it.
He talked about it.
Very open about it.
Who would supply someone battling addiction with drugs?
Yeah, it's a great question.
When you're talking about somebody that's supposed to be a confidant, a sponsor, a helper, a
We have all these terminology, these terms that we use.
It's very different than a Michael Jackson situation where you actually have somebody
medically administering a drug.
Who would do it?
I would have to say, Nancy, as you and I and our listeners know, the same people that
are selling drugs to begin with, maybe somebody that doesn't know him well enough,
or because it was prescribed lawfully for a medicinal purpose, somebody that honestly,
although mistakenly thought that he needed it or could handle it in different
doses. You know, ketamine, if it's being as supervised, is used, certainly not very, not as often as
many other drugs, but you have to believe whether or not somebody thought they might be doing
him a favor if he was depressed, if he was suicidal. They could not have been more wrong. And if it
comes out that we can find the supplier or someone who ate it or abetted him, I want you to just
think about this, Wendy Patrick, about criminal charges. Joining me right now is
The expert in this field.
As far as I'm concerned, the preeminent expert, Dr. William Maroney, medical examiner, toxicologist,
pathologist, opioid treatment expert, author of American Narcan, which is on Amazon.
Dr. Moroni, take a listen to what we've learned about the autopsy.
Matthew Perry's autopsy report doesn't say how or when Perry used ketamine prior to his death,
but the coroner ruled out the ketamine treatments he had a week and a half before his death
because ketamine has a half-life of three to four hours or less.
The report notes at the high levels of ketamine found in his post-mortem blood specimens,
the main lethal effects would be from both cardiovascular overstimulation and respiratory depression.
Drowning contributes due to the likelihood of submersion into the pool as he lapsed into unconsciousness.
And that's not all, Dr. Moroney.
Wait for it.
I would never have imagined this goes into the cocktail.
The autopsy report noted Matthew Perry's history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, and diabetes.
The report mentions Perry's past drug use, but notes Perry had reportedly been clean for 19 months.
The New York Post reports that in the autopsy report, a common is made about Perry undergoing ketamine infusion therapy,
Most recently, one and a half weeks before his death.
The report states ketamine treatments are for anxiety and depression,
but ketamine in the system couldn't be from the infusion therapy.
Dr. Bancol Johnson, one of the leading neuroscientists and physicians in the field,
tells the New York Post that ketamine in Perry's system is more likely from recreational use.
Male hormone testosterone injections, and there's one more ingredient.
Why was Matthew Perry getting injections of the male hormone testosterone?
Listen.
According to Matthew Perry, he had been cleaned for 19 months, but the Daily Mail reports,
the actor died from an overdose of the party drug ketamine.
According to the autopsy report, a detective who attended the scene of Perry's death said,
quote, during my investigation, no alcohol, illicit drugs, or drug paraphernalia were found, unquote.
The Daily Mail also claims that.
the 54-year-old was getting injections of the male hormone testosterone,
and an unnamed female associate claimed the injections were causing him to be angry
and mean for the last couple of weeks.
From my point of view, Dr. Moroni, as a layperson and not a doctor, an MD like you,
if something causes you to be angry and mean,
it makes me wonder if it also didn't jack up his heart rate,
this male testosterone injection.
But, I mean, I don't know what to make of it.
Dr. Moroni because you've got ketamine, you've got testosterone, you've got the opioid treatment drug.
There's so much going on there.
What you have is a cocktail of disaster because you probably are dealing with multiple doctors
that are not communicating.
Nobody's coordinating his care.
And if he's getting ketamine, as it said in the,
autopsy, there's ketamine contents in the stomach that would be ketamine pills.
That's a rogue doctor.
Somebody outside of good practice guidelines giving pills they have no business giving in
addition to ketamine treatments.
I mean, is a ketamine used by vets so animals don't have pain during operations?
Yeah, it helps with anesthesia for your cats and dogs.
but at low doses, it's been shown to be beneficial in a massively unstable major depressive disorder.
But guess what?
That acceptable therapy is nasal.
It's a nasal spray with your psychiatrist.
Wait, what?
You're saying ketamine, which many people believe is just used by veterinarians.
now people are using it and you're saying that the only approved way for it to be used by people is by a nasal spray
the acceptable FDA approved supervised ketamine treatment is to go see your psychiatrist
have an appointment get a nasal spray and stay until you're stable and have a counseling
session. What you have here is somebody keeps saying, well, he's in treatment. He's in recovery.
He's not getting enough psychosocial therapy because he's impaired. He's impulsive. He's processing
poor decisions because he doesn't have that counseling part linked to all this medicine.
What is ketamine? Ketamine is a class of medicine that works on transmitters called glutamate.
Oh, dear Lord in heaven.
Speak English, man.
What, speak English.
I mean, is this something I've got to worry about
they're going to have in the halls of my twins high school?
I mean, I hear about ecstasy, coke, marijuana, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But ketamine?
Ketamine's been abused for 20 years in drug culture and drug use.
But is it traded freely on the street?
It is on the street.
You can buy it if you can ask for it from your dealer.
They'll get you some.
But it's FDA approved as a name.
and he's not getting the FDA approved version.
Okay, I heard somebody jumping in.
Is it, Wendy or Karen Stark?
Karen, it's used as a club drug.
It started years ago, Nancy, but it's continuing.
People do use it recreationally.
But it's also, there are a lot of trials going on where they are psychedelics to stop
addiction, just the opposite of what we have here, and for depression.
and that has to be a trial because it's not FDA approved.
These are rogue doctors in rogue clinics.
The only doctor that's probably legitimate here is the one giving the buprenorphine.
That's the hardest word to say, but in order to do that, you have to have training.
The rest of these people doing ketamine, rogue, they're outside the law.
They're outside good practice.
We saw this with Anna Nicole Smith, Michael Jacks,
and Prince, all these rogue doctors treating all these celebrities, and you don't know who's
around them.
Ketamine has been around and being abused for a long time. We just don't know that much about it,
and we don't see it as much. We don't. It's not soaked into our national understanding as well,
but as far as I can remember, it's been called baby food, bump, cat killer, cat Valium,
Fort Dodge, Green, Green, Green, K, Keland, K, K,
K-hole. There's a million slang words for ketamine. And the first time I ever saw that was when I was
prosecuting and somebody had it as an aside drug. They were dealing heroin and they also had
vitamin K. And you're going to laugh at this, Mike McCormick. I said, so what's wrong with vitamin K?
Because I didn't know what vitamin K was ketamine. And that was, oh gosh, I was prosecuting a
Hope Lord, and he had a stash of vitamin K.
That's the first time I heard about ketamine.
And Matthew Carey was not the first celebrity to be open about the ketamine therapy sessions.
I mean, the week before he died, on December 1st, Chrissy Teagan was very open about the fact that she underwent a ketamine therapy session to celebrate her birthday.
And she said on Instagram how she saw space and time.
and her late son, Jack, is someone she saw during this therapy session.
So ketamine has kind of like sort of has common to the conscience as of late.
And now more because of Matthew Perry's death, you're seeing the horrible side effects that it can have.
So Miguel Melendez from E.T. joining us, you're saying that it's common use among celebrities to what fight depression?
To fight depression to figure themselves to use.
them to use it as a form of therapy.
Chrissy Keegan is far from the only celebrity who has been open about taking or undergoing
academy therapy sessions.
You have the likes of Sharon Osborne and Pete Davidson who have been open about this.
But again, academy therapy sessions is not dangerous if it's done under supervision, as
our Dr. Steen doctors here have said.
When you go rogue, in this case it seems to indicate that that's what we're doing.
Matthew Perry did, you're going to see the fatal consequences,
and that's just, that's exactly what happened here.
You're hearing Miguel Melendez, senior writer, ET,
and I've got to get everything he said, which is all correct, by the way,
explained to me medically, Dr. William Moroni,
renowned expert in this field.
So when you have ketamine treatment with a doctor,
you're saying ketamine is ingested nasally like,
through Dristan, the spray into your nose.
And if it's used any other way, then it's rogue.
Do I have that right, Maroni?
The reason why it's rogue is the FDA-approved spray comes with specific conditions
that you're observed, that they follow instructions, and that your safety comes first,
and you really can't even drive to and from your session.
You're supposed to have somebody take care of you.
As soon as you let somebody take ketamine pills, well, it's unobserved, it's uncontrolled,
and it's clear there was ketamine in his stomach, and his level in his blood was exactly halfway between low anesthesia and high anesthesia.
You don't have those levels when you're supervised.
And the whole idea that ketamine therapy is matched to a psychosocial treatment.
a behavioral counseling session, that's where you make the changes.
You have better insight.
You have better processing of stress and you're not impulsive.
The last thing you want with impulsive behaviors with somebody in addiction is to put them on testosterone.
That's insane.
Well, everybody knows it makes you feel really good as a man.
You're 60 years old.
Suddenly, you feel 36.
Okay?
But it comes with the.
price of frustration and anger and really short tempers add that to the impulsivity of substance use
disorder and you could have a you know a dark rabbit hole a hidden monster in the shadows and somebody
who's not going to listen to somebody when they say oh you know taking a few too many ketamine
pills ketamine spray is not something you do every day it's once or twice a month with counseling
session. And because he had the pills in his stomach still at the time of autopsy, we know it was
rogue ketamine and not the type used for infusion treatment. And of course, you've got the
other factor weighing into Matthew Perry's death. And that is, with all these drugs in the system,
he gets into the pool, the hot tub, and it's not the first time. Take a listen to our cut 13.
How you doing? This is security from Beverly Hilton.
Hi, what's going on?
I need paramedics, apparently. I've got a 46-year-old female found in the bathroom that's all I've got right now, but they're requesting paramedics.
Okay. So now found the bathroom. What room is she in?
I'm not sure she fell or she was in the bathroom with the water.
4-64? I'm sorry.
That's room 434?
Yes.
Okay. And it's not east-west or anything else? There's room 434?
Yeah.
Okay. And you don't know if she's conscious of breathing at all?
Apparently she wasn't breathing and she's 46-year-old?
She was not breathing?
Yes.
Okay, but she is breathing now?
I don't know.
Okay. The person that called me was
Skyrate and pretty much out of it.
Okay. I've got security going there now.
Okay, well, send police and fire over there with that person not breathing.
Did it sound like the person was still not breathing?
Yeah, that's correct.
Okay, we'll get in there for not breathing.
Is there we can give me to the room so you can try to do CPR?
Yeah, we're going there now.
Can you give me into the room so I can try to get CPR instruction?
Oh, I'm sorry.
No, because she kept hanging up on us.
Kept hanging up on you?
Yeah. Okay, all right.
We're getting our units over there, okay?
Okay, thank you, bye.
Okay.
And there was water in Whitney Houston's lungs indicating she was alive.
alive when she was submerged underwater.
But according to what we learn, the level of cocaine in Whitney Houston's body was not lethal.
But it was enough to make her unaware of the fact she was going underwater.
And in an eerie twist, the same thing happens to her daughter.
Take a listen to our cut 16.
The only child of Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown.
Bobby Christina Brown wanted to follow her mother's footsteps as a singer and actress.
Tyler Perry cast Bobby Christina Brown in his television series for better or worse and had high
praise for her work. In her personal life, she became engaged in Nick Gordon, a friend of the
family who lived with them from the age of 12. Never officially adopted by Whitney Houston and
Bobby Brown, Bobby Christina Brown referred to him as her Big Bra online. Their engagement shocked
many. On January 31st, 2015, Nick Gordon found Bobby Christina
face down unconscious in a bathtub in her home in Alpharetta, Georgia. And then just recently,
we lose another celebrity, Aaron Carter in our cut 21. As the younger brother of Nick Carter of
the Backstreet Boys, Aaron Carter had a connection to the big time. He could sing, he could dance,
and he had the look. As with most teen idols when their 15 minutes is up, Aaron Carter struggled.
His first stint in a treatment facility was announced by his manager when the singer was just 23.
Then a year later, it was announced that he completed a 28-day rehab stint at the Betty Ford Center.
On November 4, 2022, Aaron Carter's housekeeper found his body in the bathtub at his home.
The Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner Coroner Ruled Cause of Death
was attributed to drowning after inhaling diphloroethane and taking the generic form of the brand name Xanax.
The report also indicated that Carter was incapacitated while in the bathtub due to the effects of the drugs he took,
which contributed to his death by drowning.
Aaron Carter was 34.
You know, Wendy Patrick, California prosecutor and author,
so many people, not just celebrities,
die in pools and hot tubs after too many drugs or too much alcohol.
Yeah, it's so unfortunate.
You know, we only hear about some of these famous people
because they're famous.
Think about how many men and women, friends,
neighbors, family members die in the same way,
but maybe don't just grab headlines.
It's one of the reasons we always want to reach out sooner rather than later for people that are struggling.
And I like the way in that last clip they talked a little bit about what happens after the fame.
You know, one of the things that Matthew Perry said, he said,
taking K is like being hit in the head with a giant happy shovel,
but the hangover outweighed the benefits.
And that's part of what I think celebrities are getting better at explaining
and that, yes, perhaps they're self-medicating, but it's not,
worth it in the end. And that's one of the messages that Matthew Perry wanted to leave us with.
Karen, start joining us, our renowned psychologist. Karen, we know that Matthew Perry told everyone
he had been clean going on two years. Is that common for addicts to insist they're clean?
It's tremendous amount of denial, Nancy, because they really are struggling in most cases to be
clean. They don't want to be addicted. But they're
very, very susceptible.
And when you think about somebody who's famous like that, there are always people around
who are willing to oblige them with drugs and tempt them with drugs because they want to
make them happy.
They want to be around a celebrity.
It's something that happens all the time.
So I am sure he was trying, but obviously not succeeding or that ketamine would not have
been there.
He had really been through a battle.
I want you to take a listen to our cut four, our friends from crime online, something I didn't know until after Matthew Perry passed away.
After years of addiction, Matthew Perry spent five months in the hospital after his colon burst from prolonged opioid abuse.
Perry says he was in surgery for seven hours, in a coma for two weeks, and doctors told his family he had a 2% chance of survival.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
stripped of his medical license, whang!
His reputation, who cares?
Everybody else that causes a death goes to jail.
Why not him?
Now he claims he's scraping by as a ride-chair driver.
You know what?
Take more jobs.
He also begged the court to credit him with time served.
So, wait, his sentence is he drives in Uber?
That's his sentence?
What happened?
to Matthew Perry.
Dr. William Moroney joining us,
the preeminent expert in this field.
Dr. Moroni, I believe that if my colon had burst
from prolonged drug use,
I would go through hell and high water
not to get addicted again.
But see, that's me on the outside looking in
because I'm not addicted.
Adicts tell me that they can't stop themselves.
What it is is there is an insight issue that comes with substance use disorder.
And the only way you can rewire the brain, it's like rewiring a vacuum cleaner, rewiring a radio, or, you know, rewiring a power strip.
You rewire the brain not by feeding the body drugs just as a substitute, but in depth,
therapy, making selections, looking at the trauma in your life, choosing not to be impulsive,
choosing to process your stress. You have to do that with another person face to face.
It's not always about the drug. He may have been clean from heroin for two years,
but his brain was not done processing that impulsivity. And
impulsivity, poor processing, and lack of insight.
Those are the three things that substance use disorder people suffer with.
Every single alcohol, heroin, cocaine, those are the three things.
And the only way through that rewiring is with another person in a chair face to face.
And that's just not being done today.
Everybody wants a pill.
They want a quick fix.
And these rogue doctors are not getting people to therapy they need.
In the end, the same thing is going to happen.
Somebody's going to be investigated by the medical board.
There'll be another trial in a year.
Somebody's going to lose their license.
And it's so sad that Matthew Perry had to die this way.
Same thing with Michael Jackson, Conrad Murray.
There was a trial.
He gets convicted.
In the end, he walks free and Michael Jackson still dead.
Same thing with Matthew Perry, a bright,
light has been extinguished because of ketamine.
And I want to follow up with Miguel Melendez,
a senior reporter entertainment tonight.
Miguel, I had no idea that Matthew Perry had been through so much in his battle,
even having his colon burst from prolonged opioid abuse.
But there's more, Miguel.
Let's now are cut five.
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 propofal.
When he woke up 11 hours later, he found out his heart had stopped for five minutes,
and during the long CPR process, eight of his ribs were broken.
The doctor then refused more meds.
So this guy, Matthew Perry, I mean, we look.
look at him, Miguel, and we think, wow, he's famous, he's a star, he's got all this money and this
beautiful home. This guy was in a living hell that nobody knew about. I mean, he had his
colon burst from opioid use. Then he dies essentially during a surgery and all eight of his
ribs are broken during CPR. And yet he went back to his own hellhole. He couldn't stop
himself, Miguel? Yeah, I mean, it's tragic. All these near-death experiences rooted from his need
of these substances. And he wrote in his book that he thought that the only reason why he was
revived and given CPR in such aggressive manner was because the person performing the CPR said,
I can't let the guy from friends die on my table. That can't happen on my watch. So in retrospect,
In fact, Perry asked himself, had I not been on Friends, would they have stopped giving me CPR after three minutes and said they went five minutes.
Wow.
Wow.
And you talk about these drugs in his system and even when he was detoxing in the final episode of Friends in 2004, when the episode ended and it all came to a close and everyone felt emotional, not just the cast and the crew, but everyone who was tuned in to the,
that show. Perry himself said in his book that he felt nothing because the detox drug that was
in his system at the time made him feel numb. So even in the happiest moments or what should have
been the happiest moments of his life, he felt nothing. And again, it's all rooted because
of these substance issues that he's had for so long. Miguel, you are bringing up a whole other
issue, not only the battle against addiction, but how it affects your life day to day. He couldn't
even feel regular emotions. I mean, you know, this morning when I was driving the twins to school,
I was so happy just being with them. What a loss in your life not to be able to feel all those
wonderful things. And guys, we're finding out now how his ketamine addiction.
began. Take a list to our cut six, our friend, investigative reporter Nicole Parton.
Matthew Perry wrote about the ketamine infusions he received at the Swiss clinic.
He explained in his memoir that ketamine, quote, has my name written all over it.
They might as well have called it Maddie.
The New York Post reports that Perry described the drug as a giant exhale and said he would be blindfolded
and listening to music when he got his injections.
Perry also said he would disassociate during the infusions and often felt as if he were dying.
Perry said he kept signing up for it because it was something different and, quote,
anything different is good.
Taking K is like being hit in the head with a giant happy shovel, but the hangover was rough
and outweighed the shovel.
Still, in his memoir, Perry says ketamine was not for me.
You know, Dr. Moroni, ketamine is my new nightmare.
My new nightmare, because I've never known of it actually killing anyone until now.
Well, I think the ketamine awareness has went from zero to 100 on our national barometer,
but the whole idea is effective.
Evidence-based FDA-approved ketamine treatment comes with counseling,
and where we have rogue doctors and really dark rabbit holes is people,
are going to look for this stuff and not match it to the counseling. The lack of feeling that he had
meant that he was just altered by drugs, seeing people, having emotions. You know, you talked about
your kids. I got kids the same age. Where's the celebrities with taking their kids to school?
They miss all that stuff. They're in clinics. They're in rehab. Their homes are in the hills, and
Nobody has families out there.
Let's get back to simple things.
If you're going to do ketamine, you're going to seek it out,
seek out the FDA-approved ketamine, the counseling,
the psychiatrist, behavioral health clinics, not the rogue.
Rogue leads to death.
You know one thing that Matthew Perry said?
He said that when I ever die, I'm probably going to be remembered from my role in
friends.
But what I want to be remembered for is how I helped people and maybe helped them get out of or avoid addiction.
And he has done that.
His lawyer's whined to the judge that he lost his career, his reputation, financial stability.
Yeah, everybody that gets convicted in connection with a death goes to jail as well.
they don't just, quote, lose their reputation.
According to Matthew Perry's parents, this doctor is, quote, among the most culpable of all in their son's death.
How do you think they feel tonight?
Sometimes I swear I feel there just ain't no justice.
Nancy Grace signing off.
Goodbye.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Hew.
Amen.
