Matthew Perry's death wasn't enough to shut down the so-called Ketamine Queen's drug den. Prosecutors allege Jasveen Sangha cont...
Matthew Perry's death wasn't enough to shut down the so-called Ketamine Queen's drug den.
Prosecutors allege Jasveen Sangha continued to shill her deadly product, which contributed to the Friends star's demise, for months after his death and attempted to cover up her crimes, RadarOnline.com can reveal.
In newly filed court documents, prosecutors accused Sangha, 41, of "engaging in a half-decade long drug business".
The 41-year-old allegedly sold the Emmy-nominated actor a batch of ketamine on October 24. Perry was discovered unresponsive in a hot tub at his Los Angeles home on October 28, the same day prosecutors claimed Sangha scrambled to destroy evidence linking her to the sitcom star.
Meanwhile, Fleming allegedly asked if "K" remains in "your system or is it flushed out".
Sangha was arrested in March 2023 in separate criminal case following a raid at the "Sangha Stash House" in North Hollywood, California. Law enforcement agents recovered "multiple pounds of methamphetamine pills, 79 vials of ketamine, fraudulently obtained pharmaceutical pills and other illegal drugs".
Agents also uncovered videos of Sangha "cooking" ketamine on her electronic devices, a scale covered in drug residue and a handgun registered to her boyfriend. Following her March arrest, the Ketamine Queen was released from custody after posting $100,000 bond.
Perry's cause of death was listed as the "acute effects of ketamine". But he's not the only death connected to Sangha's sinister operation.
She was additionally accused of supplying ketamine to Cody McLaury in August 2019. He died of an overdose within one day. Prosecutors alleged there's "likely more victims" based on the volume of drugs found at Sangha's residence.
As RadarOnline.com previously reported, Sangha, Fleming and three others – Dr. Salvador “Dr. P” Plasencia, Dr. Mark Chavez and Perry's live-in assistant Kenneth Iwamasa – were charged in connection with the actor's death.
If convicted, Sangha faces a minimum of 10 years and a maximum sentence of life behind bars.
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