See every story in News — including breaking news and analysis.

Kenneth Iwamasa, the personal assistant who injected Matthew Perry with ketamine, will be sentenced on Wednesday after pleading guilty to distributing the drug that resulted in death or serious bodily injury. Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of three years and five months.
Mentioned in this story
The personal assistant who injected Matthew Perry with ketamine several times with no medical training, including on the day the Friends actor was found dead in a hot tub at his Los Angeles residence, will be sentenced on Wednesday.
Kenneth Iwamasa, 61, pleaded guilty to distributing ketamine that resulted in death or serious bodily injury. Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of three years and five months.
Iwamasa’s sentencing will cap the criminal investigation into the five individuals authorities say played a role in Perry’s overdose death in 2023.
The lengthiest sentences were handed down to Jasveen Sangha, a drug dealer dubbed the “Ketamine queen” for her prolific criminal enterprise, who supplied the fatal dose, and Perry’s acquaintance, Erik Fleming, the drug addiction counselor who served as a middleman in the sale. Sangha is set to serve 15 years in prison while Fleming is expected to spend two years behind bars.
Salvador Plasencia, a former doctor, who continued to supply Iwamasa with ketamine after Perry had an adverse reaction – over two weeks before his death – which left him mute and immobile, was sentenced to 30 months in prison. Another doctor, Mark Chavez, who sold ketamine to Perry, will not face prison time. Chavez was sentenced in December to eight months of home detention and three years of supervised release.
Iwamasa’s case has drawn sympathy from some Hollywood insiders, who characterized the relationship between a celebrity and their assistant as a stark power imbalance.
He “could not ‘simply say no’,” Iwamasa’s attorneys reportedly wrote in a recent court filing.
Between 2022 and 2023, Iwamasa was employed as Perry’s live-in personal assistant. The two had been acquainted for over two decades.
Perry, who had publicly shared his struggles with opioid addiction, enlisted Iwamasa’s help in the fall of 2023 to procure ketamine – an anesthetic only legal when prescribed, and that can bring on mind-altering effects, including a sedated state.
Perry had sought ketamine infusion therapy at a California clinic to treat anxiety and depression, but turned to outside sources to increase his dosage of the drug, according to federal authorities.
Prosecutors say Iwamasa paid Plasencia at least $55,000 to purchase ketamine on several occasions between September and October 2023. He also was connected to the drug via Fleming.
In the three days leading up to Perry’s death, Iwamasa injected the actor with six to eight shots of ketamine per day, according to court documents. Authorities say Iwamasa had found Perry unresponsive that month at least twice.
In letters to the judge, Perry’s family condemned Iwamasa’s behavior.
The actor’s mother, Suzanne Morrison, said the family trusted Iwamasa to help Perry remain sober. She said: “Kenny knew, should he feel unduly pressured, that with one phone call to any number of the people in Matthew’s orbit, reinforcements would be on the way.”
Perry’s sister, Madeline Morrison, recounted the days after her brother’s death, when she observed Iwamasa behave in an “unsettled” manner. “He repeatedly volunteered his version of events without being asked, as if he were being interviewed rather than mourning a friend,” she said.
“At the time, I told myself he was simply in shock, grieving as we all were. In reality, he was trying to distract us from the truth: that he had injected my brother with a lethal dose of ketamine and left him in a hot tub to die.”
Kenneth Iwamasa pleaded guilty to distributing ketamine that resulted in death or serious bodily injury.
Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of three years and five months for Kenneth Iwamasa.
Others involved include Jasveen Sangha, who received a 15-year sentence, and Erik Fleming, who is expected to serve two years.
Salvador Plasencia, a former doctor, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for supplying Iwamasa with ketamine after Perry's adverse reaction.
Mogadishu gathers for Eid with prayers, meals, and outings!

Palestinians turn to recycling as trash crisis deepens under Israeli restrictions

With 35 candidates for the French presidency, could the far right benefit?

As the UK faces a heatwave, experts warn of increased drowning risks in outdoor swimming.