Matthew Perry update: actor’s manager reportedly retired after his death

"I think that Matty's death really impacted him"

Matthew Perry’s manager has reportedly retired following the actor’s death.

In a new report, Kate Lanier who is a client of Perry’s manager, Doug Chapin, says he was “devastated” following Perry’s death. Chapin managed Perry for 30 years; Lanier claimed after the Friends star died, he no longer wanted to work in Hollywood management and retired to Northern California.

“He was done with Hollywood. After Matty died, Doug said to me, ‘I’m done taking care of people in their careers.’ He and his husband went traveling to Portugal and Spain and got completely out of the Hollywood scene,’ Lanier explained.

She continued: “I think that Matty’s death really impacted him. When you are close to an addict, there’s a point when you go: ‘I’m done. I can’t help this person. They’re on the road to kill themselves.’ So I think his death was Doug’s final straw of not wanting to do this work anymore.”

Meanwhile, Perry‘s assistant has admitted that he had discovered him unconscious multiple times in the weeks before his death.

Kenneth Iwamasa is one of five people who was charged with Perry’s death last month, alongside Dr. Mark Chavez and Dr. Salvador Plasencia, Jasveen Sangha – known as the ‘Ketamine Queen’ – and film director Erik Fleming, a friend of Perry’s. Iwamasa was also the person who found Perry dead on October 28, 2023.

Page Six reported that Iwamasa has filed a guilty plea for a count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine causing death. He also admitted to repeatedly injecting Perry with the drug without the appropriate training.

According to a plea agreement Iwamasa signed, he injected Perry with “significant quantities of ketamine” — he believed around “6-8 shots per day” — in the final days before the actor’s death.

Matthew Perry
Matthew Perry. Credit: Michael Kovac/Getty

He also administered the ketamine shot that killed Perry. Iwamasa had injected him three times the day he died – reportedly at 8:30am and then again around 12:45pm. Approximately 40 minutes later, Perry allegedly asked him to “shoot me up with a big one,” reportedly his final words before Iwasama found him dead in a hot tub hours later, having left the house to run errands.

Iwasama told investigators that during October, he had discovered Perry unconscious at least twice. He gave Perry at least 15 shots of ketamine, all of which were supplied by Sangha, according to the indictment.

Later that same day, the indictment says Sangha, 41, messaged Fleming on Signal, writing: “Delete all our messages.”

Sangha is charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises, one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, one count of possession with intent to distribute ketamine and five counts of distribution of ketamine.

Plasencia is charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, seven counts of distribution of ketamine and two counts of altering and falsifying documents or records related to the federal investigation.

Fleming has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine and one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death, admitting in court documents that he distributed the ketamine that killed Perry. He admits he obtained the drug from Sangha and distributed 50 vials to Iwamasa, half of them four days before Perry’s death.

Chavez has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine and admitted agreeing to sell the drug to Plasencia, some of which he diverted from his former clinic.

Iwamasa faces up to 15 years in prison, Fleming up to 25 years, and Chavez as much as 10 years according to The New York Times. Plasencia could be imprisoned for up to 10 years for each ketamine-related count and for up to 20 years for each record’s falsification count. Sangha could spend between 10 years to life in prison.

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