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🗓️ 23 August 2025
⏱️ 40 minutes
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Prosecutors have already implicated Jasveen Sangha, known as the "Ketamine Queen," who sold the drug involved in Matthew Perry's death, and now her guilty plea proves her involvement.
She is also connected to other customer deaths, and prosecutors believe there are likely more victims given the volume of drugs Sangha sold. Sangha remains in custody without bond in connection with Perry's death. Drug dealer Eric Fleming, who reportedly served as a program director at the Bel-Air rehab Red Door, also had a resident die of an overdose while under his watch.
Additionally, Brooke Mueller’s close connections to suspects Fleming and Sangha have emerged. Mueller spent time with Sangha during one of her rehab stints, and Fleming is reportedly a godfather to one of Mueller’s children.
Mueller is said to have pressured her then-boyfriend William Cooney to join Fleming’s rehab program, where Cooney overdosed and died. Mueller may have introduced Fleming and Sangha to Perry as a means to facilitate his addiction. Federal prosecutors report that Mueller is cooperating with the investigation and is not facing any charges.
Court documents reveal the close ties between Sangha, Fleming, and assistant Kenneth Iwamasa. Iwamasa told Fleming he "cleaned up the scene" by disposing of ketamine vials and syringes and "deleted everything."
Fleming then informed Sangha that he believed they were protected since he never dealt with Perry directly, only through Iwamasa, who would be considered Perry's "enabler." In their communications, Sangha and Fleming refer to Perry using the code name "Chandler."
Sangha's sentencing is still ahead.
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0:00.0 | This is an I-Heart podcast. |
0:04.8 | Crime Stories with Nancy Grace. |
0:10.8 | Bombshell tonight, the so-called ketamine queen, a jet setter out of L.A., accused of selling Friends superstar Matthew Perry, a fatal dose of ketamine that killed him. |
0:25.4 | Now guilty. I'm Nancy Grace. This is crime stories. I want to thank you for being with us. |
0:31.6 | This, after the so-called ketamine queen, denies she even knew knew Matthew Perry. What a liar. In the last hours, we |
0:42.7 | learned Javine Senghaz is the only one left standing after the death of beloved friends star Matthew |
0:51.1 | Perry. For other defendants have reached guilty plea agreements with the prosecutors. |
0:57.4 | And I don't like any of them. They're much too lenient. But ketamine queen, guilty. |
1:03.6 | Listen. In a stunning admission that rips the mask off a Hollywood drug ring, |
1:10.1 | Jasveen Sengha, the notorious ketamine queen, has confessed to peddling the lethal dose of the drug that killed the beloved friend's icon. |
1:20.8 | The bombshell guilty plea filed in federal court on Monday, August 18th, marks the final and most damning chapter in the legal |
1:29.4 | fallout from the star's untimely demise, sparing Sengha a trial. |
1:35.2 | Known to millions for his role as Chandler Bing on the hit NBC sitcom Friends, Perry had |
1:41.9 | long struggled with addiction. The 54-year-old was discovered lifeless in the hot tub |
1:48.0 | of his Pacific Palisades home on October 28, 23, leaving a gaping void in the hearts of millions of fans. |
1:57.4 | The medical examiner ruled that ketamine typically used as a surgical anesthetic was the |
2:03.8 | primary cause of death. While the star had a legal prescription for the drug to treat his depression, |
2:10.4 | he turned to the shadows when his supply ran low. Prosecutors charged that Sengha fueled his addiction, meeting him just four days before |
2:20.1 | his death to sell him 25 vials of ketamine for $6,000 cash. Here's U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada |
2:27.6 | at a previous news conference. We charge five defendants in this matter. These defendants took advantage of Mr. Perry's addiction issues to enrich themselves. |
2:40.0 | They knew what they were doing was wrong. |
2:42.4 | They knew what they were doing was risking great danger to Mr. Perry, but they did it anyways. |
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