Celebrity
Ketamine Queen” plans to plead guilty to the supply of the drug that resulted in the death of Matthew Perry
Matthew Perry Death: Final Defendant Agrees to Plea
Recently, there has been a significant development in the tragic death case of Friends’ actor Matthew Perry. Jasveen Sangha, the woman who was accused of selling the star the fatal ketamine, has confirmed her intention to plea guilty.
Once referred to as the “Ketamine Queen,” Sangha is the last of the quintet who have been charged with misconduct in the death of the actor to sign a mutual agreement with the prosecutors. By her move, a new trial with this September date will not be held, and the judicial saga shall thus be left behind.
The “Ketamine Queen” Admits Her Role in Mattew Perry Death
It was confirmed in a statement from the Department of Justice that a 42-year-old will plead guilty to 5 different felony cases, with the most important being the one that connects her directly to the giving of the fatal injection of ketamine to Matthew Perry.

The authorities have been depicting Sangha who is a dual US and UK national, as a drug dealer who was selling drugs on a large scale and was very famous. She actually became so infamous that she was even called the “Ketamine Queen” by her clients—a name which the prosecutors not only used to refer to her but also used it frequently in their filings and even the official case name was their incorporation.
Facing Decades Behind Bars
The plea deal describes in detail the unlawful acts she committed. Sangha, for her part, has acknowledged guilt to charges of operating a drug-involved premises, three counts of distributing ketamine, and the most serious one: supplying the exact substance that caused death or serious physical injury.

The following step in the judicial process is a formal court hearing where she will be officially changing her plea to guilty. It is then that her sentencing date will be arranged. As a result of this guilty plea, she is hereby confronted with the likelihood of being incarcerated for a period of not more than 45 years.
How a Web of Plea Deals Unraveled the Matthew perry Case
The inquiry had already decided to focus on two prominent figures: Sangha and a doctor named Salvador Plasencia, who had previously agreed to a plea deal back in June. The collaboration of the three men who were charged helped the prosecutors to ramp up the case against the two.
Mark Chavez—the man who allegedly bought the drugs from Sangha—along with Kenneth Iwamasa and Erik Flemin, all agreed to plead guilty last year. But their agreements were made on the condition that they would assist the investigation. Their assistance encompassed furnishing the authorities with the statements that recognized Sangha and Plasencia, thereby, effectively, their assigning a death sentence.
