logo
Matthew Perry doctor to plead guilty to supplying ketamine to Friends star

Matthew Perry doctor to plead guilty to supplying ketamine to Friends star

Irish Times7 hours ago

A California doctor charged in the overdose death of Friends star
Matthew Perry
has agreed to plead guilty to four counts of illegal distribution of the drug ketamine, according to a court filing on Monday.
Salvador Plasencia, who operated an urgent care clinic in Malibu, faces up to 40 years in prison, according to a statement from prosecutors.
He is expected to enter the guilty plea in the coming weeks.
Plasencia was one of five people charged in the death of Perry at age 54.
READ MORE
An autopsy found the actor died from acute effects of ketamine and other factors that caused him to lose consciousness and drown in his hot tub in October 2023.
Ketamine is a short-acting anaesthetic with hallucinogenic properties. It is sometimes prescribed to treat depression and anxiety but also abused by recreational users.
In the plea agreement, Plasencia admitted to injecting Perry with ketamine at the actor's home and in a Santa Monica parking lot in the weeks before his death, in exchange for thousands of dollars, and that it was 'not for legitimate medical purposes.'
Plasencia obtained the ketamine from another doctor, Mark Chavez of San Diego. According to earlier court filings, Plasencia texted Chavez about Perry, saying: 'I wonder how much this moron will pay.'
Chavez and two other defendants already have pleaded guilty in the case. None has yet been sentenced.
A fifth defendant, Jasveen Sangha, whom authorities said was a drug dealer known to customers as the 'ketamine queen', has been charged with supplying the dose that killed Perry. She has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go on trial in August.
Perry had publicly acknowledged decades of substance abuse, including during the years he starred as Chandler Bing on the hit 1990s television sitcom Friends. – Reuters

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Matthew Perry doctor to plead guilty to supplying ketamine to Friends star
Matthew Perry doctor to plead guilty to supplying ketamine to Friends star

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Matthew Perry doctor to plead guilty to supplying ketamine to Friends star

A California doctor charged in the overdose death of Friends star Matthew Perry has agreed to plead guilty to four counts of illegal distribution of the drug ketamine, according to a court filing on Monday. Salvador Plasencia, who operated an urgent care clinic in Malibu, faces up to 40 years in prison, according to a statement from prosecutors. He is expected to enter the guilty plea in the coming weeks. Plasencia was one of five people charged in the death of Perry at age 54. READ MORE An autopsy found the actor died from acute effects of ketamine and other factors that caused him to lose consciousness and drown in his hot tub in October 2023. Ketamine is a short-acting anaesthetic with hallucinogenic properties. It is sometimes prescribed to treat depression and anxiety but also abused by recreational users. In the plea agreement, Plasencia admitted to injecting Perry with ketamine at the actor's home and in a Santa Monica parking lot in the weeks before his death, in exchange for thousands of dollars, and that it was 'not for legitimate medical purposes.' Plasencia obtained the ketamine from another doctor, Mark Chavez of San Diego. According to earlier court filings, Plasencia texted Chavez about Perry, saying: 'I wonder how much this moron will pay.' Chavez and two other defendants already have pleaded guilty in the case. None has yet been sentenced. A fifth defendant, Jasveen Sangha, whom authorities said was a drug dealer known to customers as the 'ketamine queen', has been charged with supplying the dose that killed Perry. She has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go on trial in August. Perry had publicly acknowledged decades of substance abuse, including during the years he starred as Chandler Bing on the hit 1990s television sitcom Friends. – Reuters

Colum McCann: ‘Diane Foley's story was inherently dramatic – mother meets son's killer, then forgives him – and I was interested in the challenge of writing a libretto'
Colum McCann: ‘Diane Foley's story was inherently dramatic – mother meets son's killer, then forgives him – and I was interested in the challenge of writing a libretto'

Irish Times

time11 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Colum McCann: ‘Diane Foley's story was inherently dramatic – mother meets son's killer, then forgives him – and I was interested in the challenge of writing a libretto'

About 20 minutes into American Mother , a new opera by the Irish writer Colum McCann and the British composer Charlotte Bray, there's a heart-stopping image. A man with a shaved head, kneeling in an orange jumpsuit, is lowered into view. No words or music are needed. It evokes the last moments of James Foley , before he was beheaded by Islamic State extremists in Syria in 2014. The sight of the journalist in the jumpsuit, which comes from his filmed execution, ranks alongside the 9/11 attacks as one of the most recognisable, and shocking, images of the 21st century. Eight years later Jim's mother, Diane Foley , entered a high-security prison in Virginia, in the United States, to meet Alexanda Kotey , one of the men now serving eight life sentences for their roles in the terrible end of her son and others in Islamic State captivity. The opera, which premiered this month in the German city of Hagen, is based on the book of the same name that McCann wrote with Diane Foley last year. Telling her remarkable story, the book has been praised around the world as a staggering exercise in empathy and forgiveness. READ MORE The stage adaptation was an unlikely and daring collaboration for McCann. Opera was never his thing, says the writer, who is based in the US, but he decided to have a go writing his first libretto after being approached by Bray. 'I knew Diane's story was inherently dramatic – mother meets son's killer, then forgives him – and I was interested in the challenge of writing a libretto,' he says. 'I thought of it as an epic or semi-epic poem. And the more I got involved the more powerful this seemed to me. I felt the story fit the [opera] form.' The curtain rises on a sparse stage set – bed, mirror, table, clothes on hangars – and Bray's prologue. An uneasy musical psychogram disturbs and draws in the audience with high strings, ghostly woodwinds and dreamily ominous bells. Within five minutes Bray has painted a soundscape of loss – one maintained masterfully for 80 minutes by the Theater Hagen orchestra. [ Eight years after James Foley's murder by Isis, his mother sat down with his captor. Why? Opens in new window ] Bray's main score has traces of Mark-Anthony Turnage, while her creepy underscoring rivals that of the German-born Hollywood master Franz Waxman. Author Colum McCann and Diane Foley, mother of the late war journalist James Foley. Photograph: Joel Sagat/AFP via Getty Images The composer says she first became interested in – and appalled by – Syria's civil war after writing a cello sonata about Islamic State's destruction of the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra a decade ago. Then she learned of Jim Foley's life, did a deep dive and heard from Diane Foley about the upcoming book. 'It's incredibly meaningful that this story has touched so many people, but as a new story now it is touching people in a different way,' Bray says. 'It's a universal story about forgiveness and how Diane could summon the courage to forgive someone who did that.' Bray says having McCann come on board was a 'gift'. Foley agrees. Bray's approach to turn her son's life and death into an opera shocked, she says, but she was reassured by McCann's role as librettist. 'Colum did a brilliant job,' says Foley, who will attend a performance with McCann on Wednesday, June 18th. 'I hope the opera helps us seek to understand one another and try to forgive ourselves – and others.' The show is carried on the shoulders of two strong leads. The US-born mezzo-soprano Katharine Goeldner says she faced three challenges as Diane: a complex score she was studying until the afternoon of the premiere, on June 1st; the effort to stand still for much of the evening, as directed; and the task of playing a living person who had gone through hell. 'It's a privilege and honour but also a responsibility,' Goeldner says. 'I can't be her onstage. Instead what I try to do is challenge her emotions and give voice to that. I still worry about whether I get more angry than she would approve of.' [ American Mother: The many questions behind James Foley's killing Opens in new window ] The real Foley kept her anger, sadness, ambivalence and misgivings tight inside her – and the book. The fictionalised Foley has mood swings, from cool poise to the kind of emotional confrontations crucial for a stage drama. They give the evening even more heft alongside the Ballymena-born baritone Timothy Connor , whose Kotey – the British-born man now serving eight consecutive life sentences for Isis-related kidnap, torture and killings – is gripping, visually and physically, coming across as a mix of a Tom Hardy-style hard man; Stanley Kowalski, from A Streetcar Named Desire; and Andrew Tate , the social-media influencer accused of rape, bodily harm and human trafficking. American Mother: Dong-Won Seo, Roman Payer, Timothy Connor and Katharine Goeldner in the opera by Charlotte Bray and Colum McCann. Photograph: Volker Beushausen/Theater Hagen Even in ankle chains, Connor's character is a restless, prowling panther waiting to pounce. The singer is so gripping to watch that, at times, there is a real danger that the focus, unlike in the book, will shift from the grieving mother to the perpetrator. The 37-year-old singer says that creating the stage character was an even greater challenge than that of creating J Robert Oppenheimer in the John Adams opera Dr Atomic. 'Of course Kotey is an awful human being who has done terrible things, but I wanted to show some kind of inner struggle and vulnerability, not Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter,' he says. 'We're telling an allegory of redemption, we're not showing a Netflix documentary, so I could put a lot of me into him.' Bray's score creates a filmic atmosphere 'of giant swells, with a chain of thought in the background', he says. Steering the actors and orchestra with a sure hand from the orchestra pit is music director Joseph Trafton . 'This was deeply challenging but ultimately rewarding, because they have written such a tight story,' he says. An opera commission of this ambition in a regional venue such as Hagen's has surprised Germany's stage world. As the premiere approached, the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper described Theater Hagen as the 'wonder of Westphalia'. Friends of the house know better: it has been turning out high-quality productions for many years, and O'Connor and McCann are not the first Irish creatives to pass this way. The award-winning Longford-born choreographer Marguerite Donlon attracted audiences here from all over Germany for her productions. US freelance reporter James Foley in a room at the airport of Sirte, Libya, on September 29th, 2011. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP At American Mother's premiere, after 80 tense and challenging minutes, the audience was on its feet – a rarity for Germany. Reviews were enthusiastic, too, praising the strong performances and Travis Preston's tight direction in 'an outstanding opera evening'. 'Charlotte Bray has written an impressive opera that is as touching as it is thoughtful,' one critic concluded. In their book McCann and Foley write that to know the how of a loved one's death is to better know the loved one's life, to more fully love the loved one and keep that life alive. Long after American Mother vanishes from bookstore shelves, the emotional possibilities of opera give new life to Jim Foley's terrible death and meaningful life. For McCann, the opera is another chance to spread Jim's mission of moral courage and understanding across divisions. 'In an increasingly narrow world,' he says, 'her son's vision continues to act as an antidote to the political and social myopia.' American Mother is at Theater Hagen on Wednesday, June 18th, and Friday, June 27th

Dublin firefighter thought he could ‘rape with impunity' in Boston, trial told
Dublin firefighter thought he could ‘rape with impunity' in Boston, trial told

Irish Times

time19 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Dublin firefighter thought he could ‘rape with impunity' in Boston, trial told

A Dublin firefighter accused of rape during the St Patrick's Day weekend last year 'thought he could come to Boston and rape with impunity', a prosecutor told his trial in closing arguments on Monday. Terence Crosbie (38) is charged with raping a 29-year-old woman in a hotel bedroom while his Dublin Fire Brigade colleague Liam O'Brien was asleep in a separate bed. The woman says she had consensual sex with Mr O'Brien at the Omni Parker House hotel after meeting him at The Black Rose bar in Boston on March 14th, 2024. She later fell asleep in a separate bed but awoke to find Mr Crosbie raping her, the trial has heard. Mr Crosbie denies the charges. READ MORE Closing arguments came after five days of testimony during the trial at Suffolk superior courthouse in Boston in which both Mr Crosbie and the alleged victim gave evidence. On Monday, defence counsel Daniel C Reilly told the court that because Mr O'Brien 'was supposedly asleep' and declined to participate in the trial, 'there are only two people who can know what happened'. He said the woman was a 'less-than-reliable reporter due to intoxication and memory lapses'. Mr Reilly told the court the woman could not remember Mr O'Brien's first or last name or that Mr Crosbie had been in the Omni Parker House hotel room when she and Mr O'Brien first arrived. He also said she did not recall Mr Crosbie having tattoos, did not cry out to Mr O'Brien for help and initially claimed her alleged assailant was about her height. Mr Reilly pointed out that Mr Crosbie is taller than the woman. Mr Reilly also sought to discredit the DNA evidence taken from the complainant revealing two male profiles. Expert witnesses testified during the trial that there was an insufficient amount of DNA to conclusively identify the second male contributor from the samples. Mr Reilly suggested the second male profile could have been someone other than Mr Crosbie. Prosecutor Erin Murphy argued that Mr Crosbie's testimony was 'rehearsed and insincere'. 'Didn't it seem a bit scripted until he got caught fudging it?' she asked. When Mr Crosbie took the stand previously, Ms Murphy played a portion of his interview with police in which he told detectives he had masturbated in the hotel room and questioned whether his DNA could have gotten on the complainant that way. In cross-examination, Ms Murphy said Mr Crosbie would not have had time to masturbate alone in his room until after the alleged assault. 'He tried to come up with some bogus lie to explain why his DNA might be found later,' Ms Murphy told the jury on Monday. She said Mr Crosbie 'thought he could come to Boston and rape with impunity and then skip town like it never happened. But that's not how it works here.' The prosecutor said the complainant's 'nightmare was real'. She was a 'human being' who was questioned repeatedly about the alleged events. 'She didn't fabricate or hallucinate a highly detailed and very specific account of a stranger raping her just because she drank some alcohol,' Ms Murphy said. 'If she was so drunk and she was making up a story, how did she get so much right?' she asked, noting that details of the woman's account were supported by CCTV footage. The trial continues before a jury of eight men and four women.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store