Matthew Perry drug dealer ‘Ketamine Queen’ takes plea deal

(NewsNation) — Jasveen Sangha, a drug dealer known as the “Ketamine Queen,” has pleaded guilty to five federal criminal charges, including that she provided the drugs that ultimately led to the overdose death of actor Matthew Perry in 2023.

Sangha, 42, took a plea deal for one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises, three counts of distribution of ketamine and one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death or serious bodily injury, the Justice Department said in a statement Monday.

According to her plea deal, Sangha said she worked with Erik Fleming,  a program director at Bel-Air treatment center the Red Door, to “knowingly distribute ketamine to Perry.” In October 2023, the two sold Perry 51 vials of ketamine, which were provided to the actor’s personal assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa.

On Oct. 28, 2023, Iwamasa injected Perry with at least three shots of Sangha’s ketamine, which caused Perry’s death, the department stated. 

According to autopsy findings, the overdose caused Perry to lose consciousness and drown.

Perry had been undergoing supervised treatment with ketamine for his depression. However, his last professional session had been more than a week before his death, so the ketamine in his system could not have been from that.

The medical examiner said the amount of ketamine in Perry’s system was equivalent to the amount used as anesthesia in general surgery. 

Sangha called Fleming on Signal to discuss Perry’s death days after, prosecutors said. 

That day, she updated the settings on the Signal app to automatically delete her messages with Fleming and instructed Fleming to “Delete all our messages,” prosecutors stated. 

Two days after Perry’s death, Fleming left Sangha a voicemail on Signal and texted, “Please call . . . Got more info and want to bounce ideas off you. I’m 90% sure everyone is protected. I never dealt with [Perry]. Only his Assistant. So the Assistant was the enabler. Also they are doing a 3 month tox screening . . . Does K stay in your system or is it immediately flushed out[?],” according to the Justice Department. 

The Justice Department did not reveal the details of the plea agreement Monday.

Sangha faces a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison on the drug-involved premises count, up to 10 years in federal prison for each ketamine distribution count, and up to 15 years in federal prison for the count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death or serious bodily injury.

She also admitted in her plea agreement to possession with intent to distribute various drugs at her North Hollywood residence. 

Investigators said they found drugs and cash at her home, which included 1.7 kilograms of pressed pills containing methamphetamine, 79 vials of liquid ketamine, counterfeit Xanax pills and other drug trafficking items such as a gold money counting machine, a scale and $5,723 in cash.

Sangha also admitted to using her home to store, package and distribute narcotics, including ketamine and methamphetamine, since at least June 2019.

Fleming, Iwamasa and Salvador Plasencia have all pleaded guilty to charges related to Pery’s death.

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Trump and Hegseth assault allegations featured prominently in pro-Iran ‘trolling’ campaign



President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have been featured recently in a series of videos that have “flooded the internet” since the United States attacked Iran in late February, videos from pro-Iran groups that prominently feature the sexual assault allegations leveled against the current president and his top Defense official.

“Trump is globally known for sex crimes and, like Hegseth, charges of sex crimes – and the Iranian videos depict the two men explicitly as rapists,” reads a report published Wednesday in The New Republic.

“In one video, [a] Lego Trump has doll-like girl figures on his bed and lap, and Hegseth is shown in military garb, repeatedly committing rape. Assaults on girls are the modus vivendi of these videos’ versions of Trump and Hegseth.”

Trump has faced sexual misconduct allegations from at least two dozen women dating back to the 1970s, and was found liable for sexual abuse by a jury in civil court in 2023. Hegseth has also faced an allegation of sexual assault, though both Trump and Hegseth have denied any wrongdoing.

While not produced by the Iranian government, the video campaign – described by The New Republic as "not idle trolling" – has been heavily promoted by Tehran.

Pro-Iran groups, particularly the anonymous student activist group Explosive News, have seized on the allegations against Trump and Hegseth, depicting Trump as a sexual abuser in a series of Lego-inspired videos generated with generative artificial intelligence, videos that have gone on to be watched by millions on social media. Hegseth has also been featured prominently in the video campaign.

As to the campaign’s core message as it relates to Trump – that the president had “the ideology of the rapist” – The New Republic’s Virginia Heffernan argued it was hard to disagree.

“In Trump, the ideology of the rapist was unmistakable a decade ago, when he crowed about the joy he takes in humiliating human beings by mauling their crotches,” Heffernan wrote. “With this war, he’s trying, as usual, for highly aestheticized spectacles of humiliation, and he’s getting them – but not for Iran. For himself, and for the United States.”