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A 25-year-old man who joined his brother in a takeover robbery at a Banning cannabis store where two people were stabbed and another almost shot was bound for state prison Monday to begin serving a sentence of 21 years to life behind bars.

Raymond Emilio Paul Matus of Beaumont was convicted nearly a year ago of attempted murder, robbery, assault with a deadly weapon and sentence-enhancing allegations of using a deadly weapon in the commission of a felony and inflicting great bodily injury.

Matus changed attorneys after his conviction and submitted numerous motions, including for a new trial, that were finally disposed Friday, when Riverside County Superior Court Judge Steven Counelis moved forward with imposing the prison sentence during a hearing at the Riverside Hall of Justice.

His older brother, Richard Matus Jr., died from fentanyl poisoning at the Byrd Detention Center in Murrieta in 2022. He was 29.

According to a trial brief filed by the District Attorney’s Office, on the night of June 23, 2018, the defendants targeted the Go Green Calming Solutions marijuana shop at 6020 Ramsey St.

The brothers burst into the outlet, and the security guard, identified in documents only as “J.S.,” immediately identified Richard Matus as a threat and physically engaged him.

The brief said another employee, Daniel Tellez, came to the guard’s aid, and they managed to wrest a handgun away from Richard Matus, causing it to fall on the floor.

Prosecutors said Raymond Matus went to assist his older brother, stabbing Tellez in the left arm, prompting the man and the guard both to retreat to the rear of the outlet.

Another employee, Thomas Harris, also attempted to subdue Richard Matus and prevent him from retaking possession of the pistol. According to the prosecution, “the defendant looked at the struggle for the gun that was occurring … and stabbed Harris from behind.”

“(Raymond Matus) stabbed Harris eight to 10 times in an attempt to assist his brother to get free,” according to court papers. “The defendant stabbed Harris even when his accomplice brother was back on his feet, and Harris was no longer struggling for the gun.”

A patron of the marijuana shop, Rafat Ali, heard the commotion from the parking lot, armed himself with a baseball bat and went in to help the employees. When he encountered Richard Matus with the firearm, Ali headed for the exit. Prosecutors said that a shot was fired in the victim’s direction, and he slipped, but wasn’t struck by gunfire.

“Ali sustained a laceration to his chin because he fell, not because he was shot in the face,” according to the defense’s brief.

The brothers initially fled the shop without anything, but they returned moments later and grabbed “three jars of marijuana and a backpack” belonging to one of the employees, according to the prosecution.

Tellez and Harris suffered non-life-threatening stab wounds and were treated at San Gorgonio Memorial Medical Center, where Ali was also treated for the cut on his chin, court papers said.

Within two days of investigators circulating security surveillance photographs of the assailants via social media, numerous people contacted police, confirming the men’s identities, according to documents. A week later, the pair were arrested without incident in San Diego.

Richard Matus had prior convictions for driving under the influence and being a habitual traffic offender. His younger brother had a juvenile conviction for robbery, court papers stated.

The Matus family filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in 2023 against the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department in connection with the death of Richard Matus, who reportedly suffered a heart seizure after taking an unspecified quantity of fentanyl smuggled into his jail cell.

The plaintiffs allege staff were deficient in their response and pointed to wider, systemic problems caused by the sheriff, his administrators and the county, setting the stage for their loved one’s loss.

“}]] A 25-year-old man who joined his brother in a takeover robbery at a Banning cannabis store where two people were stabbed and another almost shot was bound for state prison Monday to begin serving a sentence of 21 years to life behind bars. Raymond Emilio Paul Matus of Beaumont was convicted nearly a year ago  Read More  

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