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Matthew Perry Case: The Moment Liability Actually Began — And Why It Was Missed

8th Apr 2026
What This Means Outcome: Jasveen Sangha jailed for 15 years after supplying the ketamine that caused Matthew Perry’s death Mechanism: Legal exposure formed not at the overdose, but during a series of routine decisions to continue supply as risk escalated Implication: The highest-risk moment is often the one that feels ordinary—and therefore goes unchallenged The most important moment in the death of Matthew Perry doesn’t look like a turning point—and that’s exactly why it was missed. Following his 2023 ketamine overdose, Jasveen Sangha has now been sentenced to 15 years in prison for supplying the fatal dose, pleading guilty to distributing ketamine resulting in death. But the case doesn’t really turn on the overdose itself. By the time Perry was found dead, the legal risk had already been created earlier, when supply continued even as the situation was becoming more dangerous. Jasveen Sangha, dubbed the “Ketamine Queen,” was sentenced to 15 years in prison for supplying the fatal dose linked to Matthew Perry’s death The moment that actually created the risk It is easy to frame this case around relapse and a fatal outcome, because that is the most visible part of the story. Legally, however, that is not where the centre of gravity sits. Perry had been receiving ketamine legally through a doctor as an off-label treatment for depression. In the weeks before his death, prosecutors said his use escalated and he began seeking additional supply outside that structure. This shift matters because it marks the point at which controlled access gives way to extended access without the same safeguards. At that stage, the system is no longer simply managing use; it is responding to increasing demand. According to prosecutors, Sangha sold Perry 25 vials of ketamine, including the fatal dose, for $6,000 in cash just days before his death. She later pleaded guilty to federal charges. Viewed in isolation, that transaction appears decisive. In context, it forms part of a broader sequence in which each step resembles a continuation of what came before: access already existed, demand increased, and supply adjusted to meet it. Because nothing in that progression requires a dramatic break, it often passes without challenge. What matters is not only that supply was available, but that it continued as conditions changed. That is the point at which risk moves from abstract to attributable, even though it may not feel like a clear turning point at the time. Why the law follows the decision—not just the outcome The charge at the centre of this case—distribution resulting in death—is structured to connect supply directly to outcome. It allows prosecutors to establish liability based on causation and distribution, rather than intent. This shifts the legal focus away from the final moment and towards the decisions that allowed the situation to continue. The key question becomes not what happened at the end, but how access was maintained along the way. In this case, prosecutors argued that Sangha continued selling ketamine even after learning that drugs she supplied had been linked to Perry’s death. While intent is not required to establish the offence, that allegation reinforces how the continuation of supply was evaluated. What this reveals is that liability does not emerge suddenly. It develops through a pattern of ongoing decisions, each of which may appear routine when viewed in isolation, but collectively establish the conditions for the outcome. What people get wrong about cases like this Cases of this kind are often reduced to a familiar narrative involving a vulnerable individual and a reckless supplier. That interpretation is incomplete. Five people, including doctors and a personal assistant, have pleaded guilty to various charges connected with Perry’s death, indicating that the legal system did not treat this as a single-point failure. Instead, it reflects a chain of access that moved from regulated use to expanded and ultimately uncontrolled supply. Responsibility within that chain does not remain fixed. It shifts over time, following those who continue to enable access as the situation becomes more acute. The critical point is that this shift often occurs before it is recognised as a legal issue, which is why it is frequently overlooked. Why this pattern matters beyond this case Although this case involves a high-profile individual, the underlying structure is not unusual. It arises wherever controlled access exists alongside increasing demand and multiple points of supply. The pattern is consistent: access is initially managed, demand grows, and supply adjusts rather than stopping. What makes this dynamic difficult to manage is that the continuation of supply rarely appears exceptional in the moment; it tends to resemble normal behaviour extended slightly beyond its original boundaries. That is precisely where the risk lies. When behaviour continues without reassessment, even as circumstances change, the point at which intervention should occur can pass unnoticed. By the time the consequences become clear, the legal exposure has already taken shape. Where the case really lands The sentencing of Jasveen Sangha establishes accountability for the role she played in the death of Matthew Perry. The more instructive question, however, is when that accountability began. It did not begin at the overdose or at the point of death. It developed earlier, through a sequence of decisions in which access continued as risk increased without interruption. The significance of this case lies in that timing. The point at which liability forms is often less visible than the event that ultimately brings it to light, which is why it is so often missed until it is too late.

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