Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WSJ does a deep dive on his drug dealer - "The Ketamine Queen of Los Angeles"
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/ketamine-queen-jasveen-sangha-matthew-perry-death-0613a35e
The comments on her IG page are lit. She wasn’t able to deactivate the account before she was arrested. Her bail was denied.
https://www.instagram.com/jasveen_s?igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
So it’s legal to possess and use as much ketamine as you want, but it’s illegal for someone to sell it to you? How does that make sense? I mean, if an obese man died of a massive heart attack right after eating one last plate of biscuits and gravy, we wouldn’t charge the waiter with murder. How is this any different?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WSJ does a deep dive on his drug dealer - "The Ketamine Queen of Los Angeles"
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/ketamine-queen-jasveen-sangha-matthew-perry-death-0613a35e
The comments on her IG page are lit. She wasn’t able to deactivate the account before she was arrested. Her bail was denied.
https://www.instagram.com/jasveen_s?igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
Anonymous wrote:WSJ does a deep dive on his drug dealer - "The Ketamine Queen of Los Angeles"
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/ketamine-queen-jasveen-sangha-matthew-perry-death-0613a35e
Anonymous wrote:oops yeah, well they will lose their license as they were loose with it![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dealers should definitely be prosecuted. I have mixed feelings about the personal assistant. Matthew was his employer. If he refused to give him injections, the most likely scenario was that he would have been replaced by a new assistant who agreed. The assistant wasn’t in a position to refuse without risking his job. Should he have chosen to walk away instead of enable his boss? Perhaps, but he’s not solely responsible for what happened.
No one would even consider prosecuting Matthew Perry for possessing and using ketamine, so why should it be illegal to sell it to him? If it’s okay for him to have it, then why is not okay to sell it to him? He’s a grown adult. He’s capable of making his own decisions. I honestly don’t get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it rather stupid that the drug dealer is supposed to make sure their buyers don't die. Matthew is the only one responsible for his own health.
The medical doctors involved committed malpractice in a many ways. Both should and likely will lose their licenses to practice.
yeah they will loose their license, given callousness of their texts likely forever, so hard to get into medical school or if foreign med grad become a doc here, to loose your career for 55K, jeez....I see that happening more in ultra rich areas where the docs cant keep up with the Jones; and then really go nuts for money
Anonymous wrote:The dealers should definitely be prosecuted. I have mixed feelings about the personal assistant. Matthew was his employer. If he refused to give him injections, the most likely scenario was that he would have been replaced by a new assistant who agreed. The assistant wasn’t in a position to refuse without risking his job. Should he have chosen to walk away instead of enable his boss? Perhaps, but he’s not solely responsible for what happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it rather stupid that the drug dealer is supposed to make sure their buyers don't die. Matthew is the only one responsible for his own health.
The medical doctors involved committed malpractice in a many ways. Both should and likely will lose their licenses to practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it rather stupid that the drug dealer is supposed to make sure their buyers don't die. Matthew is the only one responsible for his own health.
Ultimately yes, but his assistant could have refused to inject him. Could have found rehab for him, counseling, a NA meeting. But no, the assistant chose to help him be an active addict multiple times in one day.
If someone is suicidal would you pull the trigger for them? Help them tie the rope?
He had done rehab and was in counseling. This drug was being used to treat depression and Matthew took it too far. Don't compare suicide to drug addiction.
Why didn't the assistant call Matthew's counselor? WHY inject him with ketamine, multiple times? Just why??
Call the counselor, call the rehab clinic, call whoever should be called in that situation. Don't help him inject way too much of the drug. I've lost family to addiction and suicide. Someone who od'd on their meds. I will compare them, thanks.
If he was so drugged out, how did he make his way to the hot tub and drown alone.
Stop being so self righteous. I do not feel sorry for drug addicts or the idiots that enable them. I do not believe drug addiction is an involuntary condition. Suicidal thoughts are involuntary. They are not the same regardless if you are going to say you lost family to them to make your statements hold more credibility.
I think the cause of death was ketamine OD, not drowning.
Drowning as listed as a contributing factor. You'd think one of them would have thought, hey, maybe getting in a hot tub after a large dose of drugs isn't the best idea.