Matthew Perry’s family addresses arrests 1 year after his death: ‘You’re goin’ down, baby’
By Stephanie Webber,
1 days ago
Matthew Perry’s family spoke out in an emotional interview with the “Today” show, which aired in full on the one-year anniversary of his death on Monday.
“Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie was joined by Perry’s mother, Suzanne Perry, stepdad Keith Morrison and sisters Emily, Caitlin and Madeline Morrison.
“[To light up a room is] something you’re born with or you’re not born with. And he was certainly born with it in spades,” the “Dateline” host, 77, gushed about his stepson.
“But it must be said, I think,” Suzanne chimed in. “That he was also very lonely in his soul.”
The “Friends” alum died on Oct. 28, 2023, at his home in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles. He was 54.
An autopsy performed by the Los Angeles County coroner revealed he died from a ketamine overdose. The report listed the manner of death as accidental drowning.
“I’m a very lucky woman, but there was one glitch. There was one problem that I couldn’t conquer,” Suzanne went on. “I couldn’t help him.”
She added: “You’ve got to stop blaming yourself because it tears you up.”
Morrison, who married Suzanne in 1981, noted that Matthew was “often [a] very sad guy.”
Perry’s parents were John Bennett Perry and Suzanne. Suzanne previously served as press secretary to Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. She and Keith had four children together: Caitlin, Emily, Will and Madeline. Matthew had a fifth half-sibling, Maria Perry. Maria is the daughter of Perry’s dad and his second wife, Debbie.
“It was always a jubilant thing when he would come over,” Caitlin told Guthrie. “Even when he was struggling in dark times we were always proud of him. We were always proud of the fact that he kept fighting and that he made it a big focus of his life to help other people.”
Emily, who paused to hold back tears, joked that Matthew “was grumpy all the time but he was funny all the time.”
She continued: “All he ever wanted was to love and to be loved. He struggled so much to feel peace. And I think he got to a place where he did.”
The “17 Again” star described in his memoir, “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing,” that he attended about 6,000 Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and went to rehab 15 times during his lifetime. At the height of his struggles, he also would take 55 Vicodin pills a day, dropping his weight to 128 pounds at one point.
Additionally, he estimated that he spent around $9 million trying to get sober.
“What he taught the world was that no amount of money will cure an addict. It needs something else. And that’s what we are trying to do,” Keith explained.
For Keith, it “appeared to be as if” Matthew was sober before he passed.
“Although, you know, he was a guy who would make decisions. ‘I can handle this. I can do this. I can tell you what’s right. I know the whole system inside and out. I know what the drug will do to me.’ And so there was that worry of, ‘What is he really doing?'” he asked.
One of his sisters added: “I don’t even know if in his mind he had relapsed.”
For Suzanne, she often goes to call her son when something funny happens in her life — and she’ll sit and chat with him “for a while” at the cemetery.
The late star was receiving off-label doses of ketamine through his regular doctor to help treat depression.
Five people were arrested in Matthew’s death after a police probe in August. On the morning of his death, the actor allegedly urged his live-in assistant Kenneth Iwamasa to “shoot me up with a big one.” The first ketamine shot was administered about 8:30 a.m. and Iwamasa injected another dose four hours later. According to court papers, the star asked for a third shot 40 minutes after that.
Iwamasa, who had worked for the actor since 1994, then went to run errands. He found Matthew face down in the hot tub when he returned.
Earlier this month, Dr. Mark Chavez, 54, pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute the ketamine that contributed to Matthew’s fatal overdose in exchange for cooperating with the feds. He faces up to 10 years in prison. However, he is likely to get a lighter penalty under the federal sentencing guidelines. Alleged street dealer Erik Fleming was also charged.
Additionally, drug dealer and “Ketamine Queen” Jasveen Sangha allegedly sold Perry the lethal dose of the substance, and Dr. Salvador Plasencia allegedly hawked the drug to the actor in the month leading up to his death.
According to prosecutors, the Santa Monica, California, doctor allegedly revealed to another patient that Perry “was spiraling out of control with his addiction.” Chavez and Plasencia also allegedly supplied Matthew with about 20 vials of ketamine in exchange for around $55,000 in cash two months leading up to his death.
As for how the family feels about the ongoing investigation, Suzanne told “Today”: “I’m thrilled.”
“What I’m hoping, and I think the agencies that got involved in this are hoping, that people who have put themselves in the business of supplying people with the drugs that’ll kill them — they are now on notice,” Morrison interjected.
“It doesn’t matter what your professional credentials are. You’re goin’ down, baby.”
You know things like Matthew dying you know so many people die. That way drugs are so bad and alcohol. I’m sure he was enough where you couldn’t stop them from doing these things. There’s gotta be something people could do to help people that are drug addicts, alcohol, I don’t know what people can do about it, but there’s gotta be something he had a loving family. He had a good job. He was on the TV show of friends and he had tons of friends on that show. Just why can’t we get somebody to understand and help people out.
Joyce Brown
1d ago
"Addiction is cunning,baffeling,n very,very powerful"You truly have to want it! they say in the program!"The 3 promises of Addiction,"Jails,Instatutions, or Death."I pray Matthew 🙏 IA at Peace.
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