"There was a doctor in the background"... The whole story of actor Matthew Perry's death has been revealed
Five people, including a doctor, a private secretary and a drug dealer, were found behind the death of Matthew Perry, an American sitcom. Pictured is Matthew Shields, acting chief inspector of Los Angeles (LA), at a news conference on Perry's death./Photo = Reuters
Five people, including a doctor, a private secretary and a drug dealer, have been indicted by prosecutors in connection with the death of Matthew Perry, an actor who became popular as Chandler in the American sitcom "Friends."
According to CNN Business on the 15th (local time), a total of five doctors, resident secretaries, drug dealers and brokers were involved in Perry's death. Perry was found unconscious in a luxury Los Angeles home swimming pool in October last year due to acute side effects of ketamine. Federal prosecutors in Los Angeles (LA) have indicted them, believing they were related to Perry's ketamine use.
Ketamine is a hallucinogenic injectable anesthetic and is used to treat depression, anxiety, and chronic pain. Although it is not a fatal drug by itself, overdose can lead to loss of consciousness or slow breathing.
Prosecutors found that Perry received ketamine from two doctors last fall and became addicted to the drug. The doctors sold him 55,000 dollars worth of the drug for two months. Their text messages said, "I wonder how much this fool will pay...Text messages such as "I'll find out" were found.
They made Perry distribute and administer ketamine continuously. Even after witnessing his blood pressure rise, he left additional drugs for his personal secretary to administer them on behalf of him. At the same time, Perry obtained drugs from a drug dealer called the 'Queen of Ketamine' through a broker.
"Using Perry's addiction problem, the defendants accumulated wealth," federal prosecutor Martin Estrada said. "They knew what they were doing was wrong and posed a great risk to Perry."
"It started with unscrupulous doctors who saw him as a money hole and abused his trusted position and ended up with street vendors who sold ketamine in unmarked bottles of drugs," said Anne Milgram, director of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).
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