Movant appeals the denial of his Rule 27.26 motion after an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.
Movant was convicted of robbery in the first degree and sentenced to twenty years. After this court denied his direct appeal,
State v. Stubenrouch,
When reviewing the decision in a Rule 27.26 case, we may only determine whether the motion court’s findings, conclusions, or judgment were clearly erroneous. Counsel is presumed effective and thus movant bears a heavy burden of proof in such cases.
Richardson v. State,
Movant’s first point claims ineffective assistance in counsel’s treatment of line-up identification evidence. Movant’s attorney filed a motion to suppress this identification prior to trial, but the court refused to rule on the motion until after the trial commenced. Because evidence surrounding the line-up was already before the jury when the court finally sustained the motion, movant’s counsel withdrew the motion on the theory that it would be more effective if he were able to cross-examine the police officers concerning the line-ups and to discredit the identification before the jury. The motion court found that counsel’s conduct fell within the parameters of trial strategy and was thus not error under Rule 27.26. The decision to forgo a motion to suppress in favor of another issue is clearly a matter of trial strategy.
Jackson v. State,
Moreover, we have previously determined on direct appeal that movant suffered no prejudice from the identification testimony introduced at trial. The victim knew movant before the robbery. Nothing which occurred thereafter served to taint her in-court identification. If an in-court identification is reliable, it will not become invalid due to a tainted out-of-court identification.
State v. Robinson,
Movant’s second contention is that he was denied effective assistance and his con *329 stitutional right to confrontation because he was unable to hear the trial proceedings. Movant’s counsel was aware prior to and at the time of trial that movant suffered a hearing impairment. At the trial, however, movant wore a hearing aid powered by a new battery. At the evidentiary hearing, movant testified that he was unable to hear the trial testimony and that he contemporaneously informed counsel of that fact. Counsel, however, testified that movant made no such complaint to himself or to anyone else and that he was able to freely communicate with movant throughout the trial. The motion court found that movant made no complaint about his hearing and that he failed to show any prejudice from his alleged failure to hear.
The credibility of a witness is a matter for the motion court.
Richardson v. State,
Movant’s final point is that his counsel was ineffective in not investigating and not using reports that various people had seen a man who closely resembled movant. Three of movant’s acquaintances, on separate occasions, viewed a man whom they at first mistook for movant. All of these sightings were in public places. None of the observers knew where to find the “double” although they all were willing and available to testify at trial. Movant requested his attorney to call these three witnesses and to post an investigator at a bus stop where the “double” had been seen. Counsel or his investigator did contact the witnesses, but, he did not pursue the matter after legal research convinced him such evidence would be incompetent.
“[Ejvidence which can have no other effect other than to cast a
bare
suspicion on another, or to raise a conjectural inference as to the commission of the crime by another is not admissible.”
State v. LaRette,
Nevertheless, movant argues that discoverable evidence, a photograph, could have been used to impeach the victim’s identification and consequently counsel was ineffective in not attempting to locate the double. When an ineffective assistance claim rests on an allegation of inadequate investigation, the movant “must show that a fuller investigation would have uncovered evidence which would have improved his trial position and that he was deprived of substantial evidence by counsel’s neglect.”
Thomas v. State,
*330 The trial court’s judgment is affirmed on all counts.
