He could have said no."She ultimately found that Iwamasa did not abuse a position of trust, which could have resulted in more prison time."There is no hard evidence that you acted with malicious intent, though some would disagree," she said.Iwamasa stood at the court's podium before the sentencing and made the unusual move of looking right at Perry's family and friends as he spoke into the microphone."I'm horribly, horribly sorry, and I offer my condolences to you," he said.Iwamasa had no visible reaction to the sentence You could have made the phone call," he said.Lisa Ferguson, Perry's estate executor, painted a darker picture, saying Iwamasa deliberately drove out everyone else surrounding Perry to shore up his own power and influence.She angrily said he used Perry's addiction to his own advantage."What you are is the monster that killed him," she said.She said he had shown "not a shred of guilt or remorse" since Perry's death, and that he ought to "rot in prison"."Matthew deserved to live," she said