Inside the Matthew Perry Investigation That Led to Five People Charged: Cash, Code Names and ‘Greed’ (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

On Aug. 15, U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada announced charges against five people in connection with Matthew Perry’s overdose death.

On Aug. 15, U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada announced charges against five people in connection with Matthew Perry’s overdose death.

BeforeMatthew Perrydied of an accidental drug overdoseat his home in L.A.’s Pacific Palisades neighborhood last Oct. 28, many close to the 54-year-oldFriendsstar believed he was doing well.

Just the year before, in his memoirFriends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing, the actor—writing with the dry wit that earned him millions of fans around the globe—chronicled his debilitating dependency on alcohol and painkillers, which he abused for much of his adult life.

Explaining toPeoplewhy he told his story, he said, “I wanted to share when I was safe from going into the dark side again.”

Matthew Perry’s longtime assistant Kenneth Iwamasa.APEX/MEGA

Matthew Perry’s longtime assistant Kenneth Iwamasa.

APEX/MEGA

But addiction, that pernicious disease, never loosened its grip. At about 8:30 a.m. on the day he died, Perry asked his live-in assistant,Kenneth Iwamasa, to inject him with ketamine, a quick-acting anesthetic and Schedule III controlled substance that only medical professionals can legally administer.

Iwamasa complied, and left the gated $5 million home to run errands. When he returned that afternoon, Perry was dead, face down in the hot tub.

Dr. Salvador Plasencia allegedly administered ketamine to Matthew Perry.

Dr. Salvador Plasencia allegedly administered ketamine to Matthew Perry.

Nearly 10 months later, on Aug. 15,authorities announceda grand jury had charged Iwamasa, 59, along with four other alleged co-conspirators, in connection with Perry’s death.

Those who played a “key role,” as DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said in a Los Angeles press conference that day, included Salvador Plasencia, 42, a doctor who sold ketamine to Perry and administered it to him; Mark Chavez, 54, a doctor said to have obtained ketamine for Plasencia from legal suppliers; alleged drug dealer Jasveen Sangha, 41, named in court papers as “The Ketamine Queen”; and Erik Fleming, 54, who allegedly sold Sangha’s supply to Perry’s assistant. Prosecutors claim it was Sangha’s ketamine that killed Perry.

Jasveen Sangha allegedly supplied the ketamine that killed Perry.Jojo Korsh/BFA.com/Shutterstock

Jasveen Sangha allegedly supplied the ketamine that killed Perry.

Jojo Korsh/BFA.com/Shutterstock

Three of the accused—Chavez, Fleming, and Iwamasa—have taken plea deals. Plasencia and Sangha pleaded not guilty to multiple charges, including distribution of ketamine resulting in death, and face 10 years to life in prison if convicted at trial.

Chavez could be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison, Iwamasa 15 years and Fleming 25 years. Milgram excoriated the accused for preying on Perry, especially physicians Plasencia and Chavez, whom she called “unscrupulous doctors who abused their position of trust because they saw [Perry] as a payday.”

Dr. Mark Chavez allegedly supplied ketamine to fellow doctor Salvador Plasencia.

Dr. Mark Chavez allegedly supplied ketamine to fellow doctor Salvador Plasencia.

The detailed court documents show the dark world of drug dealing while also painting a devastating picture of Perry’s final weeks alive. While he regularly played pickleball and caught up with old friends likeFriendscreator Marta Kauffman,who said he seemed “happy and chipper,”Perry secretly spent tens of thousands of dollars on ketamine and took the drug up to eight times per day.

Perry acquaintance Erik Fleming allegedly obtained ketamine from Jasveen Sangha that he then sold to Perry’s assistant.

Perry acquaintance Erik Fleming allegedly obtained ketamine from Jasveen Sangha that he then sold to Perry’s assistant.

In his memoir, Perry wrote about previously using the drug as a treatment at a Swiss rehab clinic, saying was it “like being hit in the head with a giant happy shovel. But the hangover was rough and outweighed the shovel. Ketamine was not for me.”

Nevertheless, on Sept. 30, 2023, doctors Plasencia and Chavez, acquaintances for 20 years, learned through intermediaries that Perry was interested in purchasing ketamine, and discussed the deal.

“I wonder how much this moron will pay,” one wrote to the other, according to prosecution court papers. Chavez, who allegedly obtained ketamine with a fraudulent prescription, sold it to Plasencia.

That day, a deal with Perry was made. Plasencia traveled to the star’s newly renovated home overlooking the Pacific Ocean and injected the actor with ketamine and left syringes and more doses with Iwamasa, who paid him $4,500 for the visit, prosecutors say.

Before Plasencia left, he allegedly showed Iwamasa how to administer ketamine to Perry.

Matthew Perry in 2022.ryan pfluger/august

Matthew Perry in 2022.

ryan pfluger/august

Iwamasa, using code words like “Dr. Pepper,” indicated Perry wanted more ketamine in the following days, according to prosecutors, and Chavez and Plasencia were determined to get it for him.

“I think it would be best served not having him look elsewhere and [b]e able to be his go to,” Plasencia allegedly texted Chavez.

According to court papers, Plasencia met up with Perry one afternoon in October to give him more ketamine and injected him while the two were “sitting in the back of a car that was parked in a public parking lot near an aquarium in Long Beach, California.”

On Oct. 12, a scarier incident occurred while Plasencia was administering a dose: Perry had “an adverse reaction” and his blood pressure spiked, according to accounts in the documents.

The drug caused him to “freeze up” temporarily, leaving him unable to talk or move.

Plasencia allegedly told another patient that Perry’s addiction was “spiraling out of control,” says Estrada, the U.S. Attorney for central California. “Yet still at the same time [he was] offering to sell ketamine to Mr. Perry. I think all that conduct shows a level of greed that put the prioritized profits over the patient.”

Fleming allegedly worked with “Ketamine Queen” Sangha, who prosecutors say lived a glamorous, globetrotting lifestyle while “holding herself out as a celebrity drug dealer with high-quality goods,” including ketamine, methamphetamine and magic mushrooms.

In texts with Iwamasa, Fleming made clear he wanted to earn cash on the drug deals. “I wouldn’t do it if there wasn’t the chance of me making some money,” he allegedly wrote.

PEOPLE’s Justice for Matthew Perry cover.

PEOPLE’s Justice for Matthew Perry cover.

And over the following weeks, Perry, through Iwamasa and Fleming, allegedly purchased dozens of vials of ketamine from Sangha, including the final dose that killed the actor on the morning of Oct. 28.

In another conversation with Sangha, Fleming seemingly laid the groundwork for pointing a finger at Iwamasa. “I never dealt with [Perry]. Only the Assistant. So the Assistant was the enabler,” he wrote.

But the way authorities see it, all five parties are responsible for Perry’s death.

For more on the Matthew Perry investigation, pick up the new issue of PEOPLE.

KC Baker,

Linda Marx,

andGillian Telling

Gillian Telling

source: people.com