Affirmed by published opinion. Judge RUSSELL wrote the opinion, in which Judge WIDENER and Judge HALL joined.
OPINION
Appellant Sherman L. Wellons, Jr., was arrested following the discovery of drugs in a rental car which he was driving but fоr which he was not listed as an authorized driver. He was subsequently tried and convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and heroin, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and possession with intent to distribute heroin. Raising a Fourth Amendment challenge and an evidentiary challenge, he appeals.
On the morning of July 23,1991, appellant, Lawrence Dixon and Antonio Johnson left Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in a Hertz rental car. Dixon had rented the car from Hertz Corporation and was the only authorized driver listed on the rentаl agreement.
The three individuals drove to Atlanta, Georgia, that day. The next morning, they began the return trip to Pittsburgh. Dixon and Johnson took an air flight which departed Atlanta at 6:30 a.m. Aрpellant departed in the rental ear at approximately 6:00 a.m. with plans to drive straight to Pittsburgh.
At approximately 2:40 that afternoon, West Virginia State Trooper Donald Size-more stopped appellant for exceeding the speed limit by travelling at 78 miles per hour on the West Virginia Turnpike near Ghent, West Virginia. The trooper asked appellant for his driver’s license and the vehicle registration. Appellant produced his Pennsylvania driver’s license and informed the trooper that the vehiсle had been rented by Lawrence Dixon from Hertz Corporation. Appellant, however, could not locate the rental agreement. Instructing appellant tо remain in the automobile, Trooper Sizemore filled out a speeding ticket and radioed his base. The trooper, by radio, asked that Hertz Corporation be сontacted to verify appellant’s claim. He also asked that another trooper with a drug-sniffing dog be sent to the scene. 1 Both these requests were compliеd with. The trooper soon learned that Hertz Corporation had confirmed that appellant was not listed as an authorized driver and *119 had requested that the trooper, therefore, impound the car.
When he had finished writing the speeding ticket, Trooper Sizemore returned to appellant and asked who had rented the car; appellant responded that Dixon had. The trooper then asked, appellant for permission to search the vehicle. Appellant declined, stating as his reason that his father had been hospitalized the night before and that, аs a consequence, he was pressed for time. At that juncture, Trooper Sizemore informed appellant that he would have to wait a few more minutes for the drug-sniffing dog to examine the automobile and its contents. The dog indicated the presence of narcotics and a subsequent warrantless search of the automobile and the luggage contained therein revealed that two bags of luggage contained some cocaine; another was found to contain some heroin.
Appеllant raises a Fourth Amendment challenge to the search of the automobile, seeking to exclude the narcotics obtained therefrom. However, “the exclusionary rule’s benefits run only to those whose Fourth Amendment rights have been violated.”
United States v. Givens,
Appellant further argues that, even if he had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the rental car, he retained a reasonable expectation of privacy in his luggage which he placed in the car. However, as we have previously held,
[o]ne who can assert no legitimate claim tо the car he was driving cannot reasonably assert an expectation of privacy in a bag found in that automobile.... A person who cannot assert a legitimate claim to a vehicle cannot reasonably expect that the vehicle is a private repository for his personal effects, whether or not they are enclosed in some sort of a container, such as a paper bag.
*120
United States v. Hargrove, supra,
The district court correctly concluded that appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights were not viоlated by virtue of the search of the rental car. Appellant’s evidentiary challenge is wholly without merit. 3 The judgment of the court below is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At the suppression hearing, Trooper Sizemore admitted: "I am not absolutely sure at what point — at what point I did call Trooper Lake to bring the dog down_" J.A. 94.
. Appellant relies heavily upon
United States v. Portillo,
. Appellant argues that, after he opted to call character witnesses in his behalf, it was error for the district сourt to allow the prosecution to cross-examine those witnesses as to a 1975 rape arrest, 1975 assault charges, and a 1991 positive cocaine usage tеst. Appellant, however, opened the door to such testimony by virtue of his questioning of the witnesses on direct examination.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 405(a). In particular, one witness was asked on direct examination to testify as to appellant’s "reputation is for being a man of honesty [and] law abidingness[.]" S.J.A. 164. He responded that appellant’s reputation in that regard was positive and that he "based [this conclusion] on [his] personal observations and knowledge of him as a person for the past twenty years."
Id.
We thereforе reject appellant's contention, that the district court abused its discretion in allowing the prosecution to pursue its chosen course of cross-examinatiоn, on the authority of Justice Jackson's opinion in
Michelson v. United States,
Appellant also urges that the district court should have allowed him to testify as to the particular circumstances underlying the prior specific instances of bad conduct raised by the government. Even if this extrinsic evidence as to a collateral matter was properly admissible undеr Rule 405(a), it was surely not an abuse of discretion, given the likelihood that the evidence would confuse the jury and misdirect the jury's focus from the issues properly before it, for the district court to exclude the evidence under Rule 403.
See United States v. Waloke,
