The Desert Sun

Jury to be seated for trial of man accused in robbery

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RIVERSIDE (CNS) - A jury is expected to be seated today for the trial of a 24year-old man accused of joining his brother in a violent takeover robbery at a Banning cannabis store, where two people were stabbed and another shot.

Raymond Emilio Paul Matus of Beaumont is charged with armed robbery, attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and sentence-enhancing allegation­s of using a deadly weapon in the commission of a felon and inflicting great bodily injury.

Riverside County Superior Court Judge Steven Counelis began screening for potential jurors Monday morning at the Riverside Hall of Justice. The process was likely to conclude Wednesday afternoon, with opening statements before week’s end.

Matus is being held without bail at the Smith Correction­al Facility in Banning.

His older brother, Richard Matus Jr., died from a drug overdose at the Byrd Detention Center in Murrieta in 2022. He was 29 years old.

According to Banning police and court documents, on the night of June 23, 2018, the defendants allegedly targeted the Go Green Calming Solutions marijuana shop at 6020 Ramsey St.

The brothers allegedly burst into the outlet and immediatel­y set about assaulting the employees -- Raymond Matus with a knife and his sibling with a semiautoma­tic pistol -- according to authoritie­s.

Richard Matus shot a man in the face, at which point several of the victim’s coworkers tried to intervene, prompting Raymond Matus to stab them, police allege.

After the victims went to the floor, the defendants allegedly grabbed multiple jars containing cannabis products, then drove away in a dark-colored sedan, according to court papers.

The victims were taken to a trauma center for treatment of non-life- threatenin­g injuries. All of the parties, whose identities were not disclosed, have since recovered.

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 has no documented prior felony or misdemeano­r conviction­s. However, he has multiple unresolved cases pending resolution, including for felony theft and assault.

The Matus family filed a federal civil rights lawsuit last year against the Riverside County Sheriff ’s Department in connection with the death of Richard Matus, who reportedly suffered a massive coronary 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 as a whole, setting the stage for their loved one’s loss.

The defendants’ mother, Lisa Matus, has appeared before the county Board of Supervisor­s to publicly air grievances about her son’s death and the inordinate amount of time coroner’s officials took in responding to her requests for informatio­n.

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