**BREAKING: Hidden Historical Pattern Emerges in Plea Deal of Michael Jackson’s Former Personal Assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa**
In a twist that has legal scholars and history buffs buzzing, Kenneth Iwamasa’s recent plea deal for involuntary manslaughter—stemming from Matthew Perry’s ketamine death—is being compared to the infamous "Courtier’s Curse" of Renaissance Italy.
Just as **Cesare Borgia’s loyal chamberlain** was executed for administering a "wrong dose" of pain relief to the prince in 1501, modern historians point to Iwamasa as the latest in a chain of **"invisible administrators"** who face full legal consequences for actions ordered or enabled by more powerful figures.
“This isn’t just a drug case,” says Dr. Lena Harrow, a historian of power dynamics. “It’s the **‘Butler Dilemma’** —the same pattern seen with **Nazi bureaucrat Adolf Eichmann** and **Watergate’s utility man, Howard Hunt**. The ‘doer’ always gets caught; the ‘mastermind’ often walks.”
Iwamasa, who admitted to injecting Perry repeatedly, represents the 21st-century echo of a medieval truth: **The hand that serves often bears the brand.** Viral hashtag: #TheButlerDilemma