Matthew Perry’s Doctor Sentenced Over His “Mistake” in Exploiting the Celebrity’s Addiction to Ketamine

“I wonder how much this moron will pay,” Salvador Plasencia cruelly joked—before supplying Perry the drugs that killed him.
By
Matthew Perry doctor with handcuffs and ketamine bottle

Iam just so sorry.”

With those words, Salvador Plasencia apologized to the family of the late beloved TV icon Matthew Perry for profiting off the actor’s addiction to the drug that ultimately brought about his death.

Plasencia, a physician, was sentenced on December 3 after agreeing to a plea deal. In exchange for admitting guilt to four counts of distributing ketamine, prosecutors dropped all other charges against him, including falsifying medical records. Plasencia surrendered his medical license and will serve 30 months in prison, followed by two years of supervised release. He will pay a fine of $5,600.

He knew exactly what he was doing to his famous victim.

Though Salvador Plasencia tried to frame his crime as a “mistake,” he knew exactly what he was doing to his famous victim—exploiting Perry’s desperate addiction to fatten his own purse, and perpetrating murder by degrees.

“I wonder how much this moron will pay,” he texted fellow doctor-turned-co-defendant Mark Chavez.

“Let’s find out.”

He found out. His patient would pay $2,000 for each $12 vial of ketamine.

“Rather than do what was best for Mr. Perry—someone who had struggled with addiction for most of his life—[Plasencia] sought to exploit Perry’s medical vulnerability for profit,” the US Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California, which prosecuted the case, wrote in a statement.

It’s no secret that short- and long-term effects from ketamine include increased heart rate and blood pressure, nausea, vomiting, numbness, depression, amnesia, hallucinations and respiratory complications—right through to addiction and death.

For the money Plasencia bled from Perry in mere days, he can pay his court-ordered fine 10 times over.

At the sentencing, Plasencia told Perry’s family he was “just so sorry.”

So sorry.

Had Perry lived to buy more ketamine at $2,000 a pop, would Plasencia still be so sorry?

Had he not been caught, would he have texted his buddy, “Let’s see how much more this moron will pay?” then doubled the price—citing inflation?

More likely, Plasencia was “just so sorry” he was caught.

And what of Matthew Perry’s grieving family? How did they receive his crocodile-tear apology?

“Here was a life so entwined with ours and held aloft sometimes with duct tape and baling wire,” they wrote in a letter to the court. “And then those greedy jackals come out of the dark, and all the effort is for naught; it all crashes down.”

| SHARE

RELATED

MENTAL HEALTH

Yale Psychiatrists Using Taxpayer Millions to Get Depressed People High on a Dangerous Drug

Two psychiatrists get $12.6 million to learn how best to use ketamine on the depressed, despite ample signs of the drug’s danger, like the death of Matthew Perry. Who is behind the drive to normalize this killing drug?

DRUGS

Doctor to Plead Guilty in Matthew Perry Ketamine Death Case

“I wonder how much this moron will pay,” wrote Dr. Salvador Plasencia, who now faces 40 years for supplying the actor with ketamine.

HUMAN RIGHTS

US Court Hands 27-Year Sentence to GirlsDoPorn Founder for Coercion and Sex Trafficking

The case exposes systemic gaps in digital law and highlights the struggle to hold exploiters and platforms accountable for online sexual abuse.