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Matthew Perry’s suspected ‘Ketamine Queen’ dealer may have called him ‘Chandler’ in cryptic messages

Matthew Perry’s suspected ‘ketamine queen’ Jasveen Sangha may have called the Friends actor a “Chandler”.

Matthew Perry died in October 2023. According to the toxicology report of December 2023, the cause of his death
Matthew Perry died in October 2023. According to a toxicology report from December 2023, his cause of death was attributed to “acute effects of ketamine.” (Brian Ach/Invision/AP)

Eric Fleming’s plea deal, which US Weekly was able to access, states that during their conversation on or around October 12, 2023, Sangha referred to Perry “using the name of a famous character [Perry] The attack happened while they were discussing the supply of ketamine to Perry. Fleming, who is an acquaintance of Perry’s, pleaded guilty to one charge each of conspiracy to sell ketamine and distribution of ketamine that caused the actor’s death.

Sangha has pleaded not guilty in the case and is still in custody after a judge rejected his bail plea last week.

The plea agreement did not specifically mention which name Sangha allegedly used for Perry.

Perry, 54, died in October 2023. According to a December 2023 toxicology report, his cause of death was attributed to “the acute effects of ketamine.” Other contributing factors included coronary artery disease, the effects of buprenorphine, and drowning.

Also read: Matthew Perry was found ‘unconscious’ several times before fatal overdose, know what happened

Investigation into the death of Matthew Perry

Earlier this month, the US Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California revealed that five people have been charged in connection with Perry’s death, despite the fact that his death was initially ruled an accident. The five individuals include Fleming, Perry’s former assistant Kenneth Iwamasa, Sangha, Dr. Salvador Plasencia, and Dr. Mark Chavez.

According to the documents, Fleming allegedly messaged Sangha using the Signal app two days after Perry’s death, saying he was “90 percent sure everyone is safe” and referring to Iwamasa as an “enabler.”

Sangha, Plasencia and Chavez were charged with conspiring to distribute ketamine. Sangha was also charged with one count of keeping a drug-related establishment, one count of possessing methamphetamine with intent to supply, one count of possessing ketamine with intent to distribute and five counts of distributing ketamine. While Chavez has agreed to plead guilty, Plasencia and Sangha have pleaded not guilty.

Iwamasa admitted that Perry was injected with ketamine without any medical expertise, including on the day of his death. Earlier this month, he pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiracy to distribute ketamine causing death.

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