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Matthew Perry’s final words before fatal ketamine shot

Matthew Perry asked his longtime assistant to give him three doses of ketamine on the day he died, and his final words reveal just how reliant he had become on the drug.

According to court documents Obtained by NBC News Shortly before Perry was found face-down and unresponsive in a hot tub at his home on Oct. 28, 2023, he asked his longtime assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, on Thursday to “give me a big shot” — another dose of a dissociative anesthetic.

The information was gathered after the 59-year-old Iwamasa and four others were indicted in connection with Iwamasa’s death on Thursday afternoon.

According to court documents obtained by NBC News, Matthew Perry asked his longtime assistant to administer three doses of ketamine to him on the day of his death. Splash News
According to documents, he asked Kenneth Iwamasa to “shoot the big one” just hours before his death. Film Magic

According to the documents, Perry, who died at age 54, asked Iwamasa to administer his first dose of ketamine at 8:30 a.m. on Oct. 28. Perry received his second dose about four hours later while watching a movie at his $5.2 million Los Angeles mansion.

Iwamasa then asked Perry to give him a third injection and prepare the jacuzzi. Following his boss’ instructions, Iwamasa left Perry’s house to run some errands. When he returned, Perry had passed away.

The beloved Friends star had previously revealed that he had been using ketamine to treat depression, but had been abusing the drug in the month prior to his death.

According to Iwamasa’s plea agreement, he administered ketamine, a drug used as an anesthetic to relieve patients’ pain, to Perry for about a month.

Iwamasa is alleged to have given the “Friends” star recreational ketamine about a month before his death. AP
Prosecutors say he was taught how to administer dissociative anesthetics by Dr. Salvador Plasencia. David M. Bennett

Prosecutors say Dr. Salvador Plasencia, 42, taught Iwamasa how to administer the drugs after meeting with Perry around the end of September 2023. The doctor is accused of providing Iwamasa with liquid ketamine and lozenges.

Although Perry was receiving regular ketamine treatments from a doctor (his last official dose was two weeks before his death), he instructed his assistant to continue purchasing the drugs from Plascencia and from a man later named Eric Fleming, both of whom were indicted.

Additionally, Plascencia is accused of conspiring with Dr. Mark Chavez, 54, to provide Perry with more ketamine in an attempt to make quick money.

Prosecutors alleged that Plascencia used Perry for financial gain. The Denver Post via Getty Images
Perry allegedly spent more than $55,000 on ketamine in the weeks before his death. matthewperry4/Instagram

“How much will this idiot pay,” he allegedly texted Chavez.

Perry is believed to have paid the two men $55,000 in cash for ketamine just weeks before his death.

Plascencia was well aware of Perry’s troubled relationship with narcotics: Just days before his death, he reportedly told another person that the “Fools Rush In” star was “spiralling out of control with narcotics addiction.”

The “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip” actor passed away on Oct. 28, 2023, due to the “acute effects” of ketamine. Noam Galai
His assistant found him face down in the hot tub at his home. source:

He also administered ketamine to the actor on October 12, knowing full well that he had just received the drug from his doctor, and witnessed his body “freeze and his blood pressure spike.”

Perry has struggled with substance abuse throughout her adult life and opened up about her use of ketamine in her 2022 memoir, “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing: A Memoir.”

He described the drug as having his name “written all over it” and acknowledged that it helped him “disconnect” from life. He also said the drug made him feel like he was “dying.”

Perry has struggled with substance abuse her entire adult life and has spoken publicly about it. AFP via Getty Images
He said, “Live well, love well, [and] He was a seeker.” ©Warner Bros./Courtesy of the Everett Collection

He added: “Drinking K was like being hit over the head with a giant, happy shovel, except the hangover was worse than the blow of the shovel.”

In November 2022, the “17 Again” actor said on the “Q with Tom Power” podcast, “Live well, love well, [and] He was a seeker.”

“And his biggest desire is to help people, which is what I want.”

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