Provided by Lisa Richwine and Steve Gorman
Los Angeles (Reuters) – The accused Los Angeles drug dealer, known as the Queen of Ketamine, agreed to admit the guilt of the accusations she made a dose of a prescription anesthetic that killed Matthew Perry Matthew Perry.
Jasveen Sangha, 42, who stated that the authorities ruled the illegal narcotic drug Stash House in the Northern Hollywood area of Los Angeles and September. Five accusations had to be to blame for the agreement with federal prosecutors, the US Department of Justice said.
The other four defendants in the case include two doctors, Perry’s personal assistant and other man who admitted that he had been selling to the actor Ketamin, already admitted guilty of various accusations, although no one has been convicted.
All five are accused of in the case a year ago.
Prosecutors argued that Sangha agreed to admit guilt for one calculation for maintaining drug -related premises, three illegal distribution of ketamine and a single number of ketamine distribution that died.
Sangha, a double US and British citizen, is expected to officially submit her claim in the coming weeks, the Justice Department said.
The accusation for the maintenance of the drug Den imposes a maximum maximum sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment. Sangha faces up to 15 years in prison for the distribution of ketamine, which killed Perry, and 10 years for each of the three other distribution calculations.
Medical examiners concluded that Perry died of the acute effect of ketamine, which, along with other factors, forced the actor to lose consciousness and drown in their hot bath in 2023. October 28th. He was 54 years old.
Glory and addiction
Perry has publicly acknowledged decades of abuse of narcotic drugs, including periods that coincided with his heights of glory, playing Sardonic but charming Chandler Bing in 1990. NBC TV comedy “Friends”.
Perry’s death occurred a year after his memoirs were announced “Friends, Lovers, and Big Scary Things”, which chronized the fight against prescription painkillers and the alcohol he wrote repeatedly ended his life.
His autopsy quoted an interview with like -minded people who claimed that Perry was sober 19 months before his death, without known drug abuse.
Ketamine, a short -acting anesthetic with hallucinogenic properties, is sometimes used to treat depression and anxiety, but is also abused by recreational users.
According to the Sangha action agreement set out by the Department of Justice, Sangha provided 51 bottles of ketamine to the intermediary between seller Erik Fleming, 55.
Prosecutors said it was in Iwamasa, which later injected Perry with at least three shots of ketamine from bottles in Sangha supplied, which caused death actor and later dead in the bathroom.
According to prosecutors, Sangha also confessed to the sale of Ketamin to the person in 2019, according to prosecutors. August, died later from drug overdose.
According to prosecutors, Sangha has used her North Hollywood home as a “Queen of Ketamine” on the street to store, pack and distribute various narcotic drugs, including ketamin and methamphetamine dating back to 2019, to keep, pack and distribute various narcotics. June
Prosecutors said that after learning about Perry’s death news about Perry’s death, Sangha tried to illuminate her signal program about all her connections with Fleming and urged him to do it similarly, stating to him “delete all our messages.”
Her action arrangement took place three weeks after a doctor who led the emergency care clinic, Salvador Plancia, 43, admitted guilty of a four -keamine distribution number and admitted that he had injected a perry with a drug actor’s home and in the back of a parked car.
Another physician, 55 -year -old Mark Chavez of San Diego, accused of illegally supplying ketamine plastic, admitted guilty of a single conspiracy calculation of drug distribution.
According to the court’s application, Plastia was once sent by Chavez about Perry, writing, “I wonder how much this Moron will pay.”
(Lisa Richwine and Steve Gorman Notifications in Los Angeles; Edited by Cynthia Osterman and Leslie Adler)