Assistant And Private Doctor Arrested For Death Of Matthew Perry

JAKARTA - The Justice Department made arrests of five people in the case of the death of actor Matthew Perry. The five people are assistants and doctors who are said to be selling ketamine for theactor's medicine.

On Thursday, August 15 local time, the Justice Department revealed their investigation process showing the existence of a low-end criminal network involving some of these people.

"This network includes household assistants, several intermediaries, two medical doctors, and a large source that supplies drugs known as the Ketamina Queen", lawyer Martin Estrada quoted Variety as saying.

The perpetrators took advantage of Perry's addiction issue to enrich themselves. They know what they are doing is wrong. They know what they are doing is a big risk for Perry but they are still doing it, "explained Estrada.

The lawyer considers the perpetrators deliberately supplying ketaminan to Friends stars who are still recovering. The main defendants are Salvadoran Plasmancia doctors and drug dealer Jasveen Sangha. They teamed up with doctor Mark Chavez, Perry's assistant named Kenneth Iwamasa and broker Erik difficult.

They supplyed contaminants and sold them to Matthew Perry, who died on October 28, 2024 at his residence. They reportedly supplied 20 bottles of contaminants to the actor since 2023 for 55 thousand US dollars or Rp867.5 million.

That same year, Plasencia was also revealed to be teasing Matthew Perry by writing a message, "I'm curious how much stupid one will pay."

Plasencia also had time to inject Perry with illegal contaminants that made Perry's body freeze and his blood flow increased rapidly. However, he still left additional contaminants for Iwa during the injection to Perry. Iwamasa also does not have a medical certificate.

After Matthew Perry was reported dead, the perpetrators sent messages saying 'Delete all our messages' Plasencia also falsified Perry's medical records to make it look like a catamin overdose.

Plasencia faces a maximum sentence of 120 years in federal prison.