THE SOCIALITE WHO WAS ACTUALLY A DRUG LORD
The mask has officially slipped, and what is underneath is terrifying. Jasveen Sangha, the woman now infamously known worldwide as the "Ketamine Queen," duped everyone. For years, she pranced around Los Angeles posing as a wealthy, highly educated socialite with a bottomless trust fund and a penchant for high-end fashion. But sources and federal prosecutors are now painting a picture of a cold-blooded drug kingpin who was running a "house of horrors" right under the noses of her closest friends.
Sangha, a dual British-American citizen, played the part perfectly. She had the MBA, the designer wardrobe, and the private jet lifestyle. But while she was sipping champagne with the Hollywood elite, she was secretly operating a massive underground drug distribution network that pumped lethal amounts of narcotics into the veins of celebrities.
Her empire of lies came crashing down in the most tragic way possible: the death of beloved Friends icon Matthew Perry. Prosecutors say this woman didn't just sell drugs; she preyed on addicts. She is the one who allegedly supplied the 50 vials of ketamine that led to Perry's fatal overdose in 2023. While Perry was fighting demons, Sangha was allegedly cashing checks, funding her lavish lifestyle with blood money.
Now, facing a staggering 65 years in federal prison, the people who partied with her are finally talking, and their stories reveal a woman who was living a sinister double life that makes Breaking Bad look like a documentary.
INSIDE THE 'STASH HOUSE' AND THE FATAL DOSE
Let's get into the gritty details of the operation. Authorities didn't just find a few baggies in her North Hollywood home; they found a pharmacy. The feds have officially labeled her residence a "stash house," a term usually reserved for cartel operations, not the homes of MBA graduates. Inside, agents discovered a treasure trove of illegal substances: cocaine, Xanax, fake Adderall pills laced with who-knows-what, and gallons of ketamine.
According to explosive court documents, Sangha was the top of the food chain in this twisted supply line. When Matthew Perry's addiction spiraled out of control, and his doctors could no longer legally prescribe the amounts he craved, his handlers turned to the black market. That road led straight to the Ketamine Queen.
This wasn't a one-time mistake. This was a business model.
Prosecutors claim she sourced the drug through a shady intermediary and delivered the goods that would ultimately stop the actor's heart. Bill Bodner, the special agent in charge of the DEA's LA office, didn't mince words when describing her operation. He called her out for being a "highly educated person" who made a calculated choice to become a trafficker to "finance this social media influencer persona."
She wasn't dealing drugs to survive; she was dealing drugs to look cool on Instagram. That is a level of narcissism that is hard to comprehend.
THE 'KITTIES' AND THE DRUG-FUELED ORGIES
You think you know Hollywood parties? You have no idea. New interviews with Sangha's inner circle have exposed a clique known as "The Kitties." This wasn't a book club. It was a group of hard-partying friends, mostly women, who treated narcotics like candy. Long-time friend Tony Marquez, who is singing like a canary for an upcoming documentary, spilled the tea on what really went down behind closed doors.
Marquez detailed wild, multi-day benders that spanned across California. We are talking about renting massive mansions at Lake Havasu and turning them into drug dens. "We'd have a white party, a glitter party. We had a shroom-shroom party," Marquez admitted.
These weren't casual get-togethers. They brought their own DJs, sound systems, and enough drugs to sedate a horse. Marquez confirmed that these events "always involved ketamine." But here is the kicker: He claims nobody called her the "Ketamine Queen" back then. To them, she was just the fun friend who always had the hookup.
The group was apparently terrified of fentanyl contamination—ironic, considering the outcome—so they went to extreme lengths to get "clean" drugs. They allegedly used runners to cross the border into Mexico, bribing corrupt veterinarians and pharmacies to smuggle high-grade liquid ketamine back into the States. "If we were going to do ketamine, we wanted to get it from the source," Marquez said.
FRIENDS CLAIM: 'WE WERE BLINDSIDED'
Here is where the story gets suspicious. Despite partying with her for over a decade, hopping on private jets, and watching her pull out endless supplies of drugs, her friends are now claiming they had zero clue she was a dealer. Yeah, right.
Jash Negandhi, a friend who has known Sangha since 2001, insists he was totally in the dark. "I knew nothing. Absolutely nothing," he told reporters. He claims she never spoke about the business side of things. Negandhi describes her as someone who "loved to dance and have a good time," painting a picture of an innocent raver caught up in a bad situation.
Marquez backs him up, claiming that because she came from money, nobody questioned her wealth. "She always had money," Marquez insisted. "She traveled all over by private jet, and did that way before everything blew up."
The defense is clear: She was rich, so why would she deal? But investigators aren't buying it. They believe the "rich girl" act was the perfect cover. While her friends thought she was living off daddy's money, the feds say she was moving serious weight. It raises the question: Were her friends really that oblivious, or are they just trying to save their own skins now that the DEA is involved?
ADDICTED TO THE FAME: A STAR-F***ER EXPOSED?
Why would a woman with an MBA and a wealthy family risk life in prison to sell drugs? According to Marquez, it wasn't just about the cash—it was about the clout. He believes Sangha became addicted to the social status that came with being the go-to girl for Hollywood's addicted elite.
"I truly believe that Jasveen was addicted to that life of dealing to celebrities," Marquez revealed. "She was addicted to being in that social circle and being wanted by celebrities."
This is the dark underbelly of Tinseltown. Sangha allegedly used her stash to buy access. You want to hang out with the stars? You bring the party favors. It is a tale as old as Hollywood itself, but Sangha took it to a lethal extreme. She wasn't just a hanger-on; she became the supply chain.
Even her lawyer, Mark Geragos, is trying to spin the narrative, claiming she "feels horrible" and that she has "felt horrible from day one." But feeling bad doesn't bring Matthew Perry back, and it certainly doesn't erase the text messages found on her phone.
THE SMOKING GUN: SHE KILLED BEFORE
If you think Matthew Perry was an isolated tragic accident, think again. This is where the story turns from tragic to downright demonic. Prosecutors have uncovered evidence that Sangha allegedly killed a customer before Perry and didn't even blink.
In 2019, she reportedly sold ketamine to a man named Cody McLaury. He overdosed and died. Shortly after his death, McLaury's grieving sister reportedly texted Sangha, explicitly telling her that her drugs had killed him. A normal human being would stop. A normal human being would be crushed.
Jasveen Sangha? She kept selling.
Martin Estrada, the former chief prosecutor, slammed her behavior as sociopathic. "Any sensible person would have gone to law enforcement, and certainly any person with any semblance of a heart would stop their activities," Estrada said. Instead, she ramped up her operation, eventually landing in the inner circle of one of the most famous actors on the planet. This wasn't negligence; this was a calculated disregard for human life.
THE KFC CONNECTION AND THE CRASHING EMPIRE
While Sangha was projecting an image of old money, her family's finances were actually a mess of lawsuits and bankruptcy. It turns out her "bottomless" wealth might have been drying up. Her mother and stepfather, who ran KFC franchises, were sued by the chicken giant for over $50,000 in unpaid royalties back in 2013. Her stepfather even had to declare bankruptcy.
Was the "Ketamine Queen" empire built out of desperation to maintain a lifestyle she could no longer afford? It certainly looks that way. She tried legit businesses—a nail salon, dreams of restaurants—but nothing pays quite like illegal narcotics.
Friends say she was recently sober, having attended rehab and claiming she was "excited about being clean." She was planning for her 40s, talking about the future. But she conveniently left out one small detail in those conversations: The feds were closing in.
THE CLIFFHANGER: JUDGMENT DAY IS COMING
Now, Jasveen Sangha sits in a cell, awaiting a sentencing hearing in February that will seal her fate. She is the final domino to fall in the Matthew Perry investigation. Two doctors have been charged. Her runner has been charged. Perry's assistant has been charged. But Sangha is the big fish.
Her defense team is scrambling, trying to paint her as a victim of her own addiction who got in over her head. But with the evidence of a prior death, a stash house full of poison, and a trail of dead bodies, the judge is unlikely to show mercy.
Will she turn on more celebrities to cut a deal? Does she have a black book of other famous clients shaking in their boots right now? The "Ketamine Queen" has pleaded guilty, but the secrets she is holding could burn Hollywood to the ground. We will be there when the gavel drops.
