ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) 鈥 Tiger Woods鈥 refusal to take a urine test following can be prosecuted under a change to Florida law last year, and prosecutors can build a DUI case against him even without lab results by utilizing deputy testimony, and body camera and dashcam video, according to a legal expert.
The golfer was traveling at 鈥渉igh speeds鈥 on a beachside, residential road in Jupiter Island on Friday when his Land Rover clipped a truck and rolled onto its side, according to the Martin County Sheriff鈥檚 Office, noting that Woods showed 鈥渟igns of impairment.”
Investigators believe Woods, who wasn’t injured, had taken some kind of medication or drug and described him as lethargic. He agreed to a Breathalyzer test that showed no signs of alcohol, but he refused a urine test, authorities said. He was arrested and released on bail eight hours later.
Woods’ agent at Excel Sports, Mark Steinberg, didn’t immediately respond to a Monday text message or phone call seeking comment. No one from — he is on the board and is chairman of the committee reshaping the competition model — has commented since his arrest.
Here’s about the case:
Woods is charged with refusing the test, among other things
Woods, who has been over the years, is charged with driving under the influence, property damage and refusal to submit to a lawful test.
Under the change to Florida law, refusing a law enforcement officer’s request to take a breath, blood or urine test became a misdemeanor, even for a first offense. Refusal was previously only prosecuted if a driver had refused to take a test during a prior incident 鈥 which incentivized people facing DUI charges to refuse the test.
鈥淣ow, it doesn’t matter if you refused previously or not,鈥 said David Hill, an Orlando defense attorney who isn’t involved in Woods’ case.
鈥榃e will never get definitive results鈥
Martin County Sheriff John Budensiek told reporters that Woods was cooperative when he talked to investigators after the accident but that he chose his words carefully.
鈥淎nd when it came for the urine tests at the jail, he stopped that,鈥 Budensiek said.
Woods had a right to refuse the test, but as a result, he was charged under the new Florida statute, the sheriff said.
鈥淲e will never get definitive results about what he was impaired on at the time of the crash,鈥 Budensiek said.
Still, prosecutors can draw on other evidence to build their case even if they don’t have any lab results, which could have determined which drugs, if any, he had in his system, Hill said.
Deputies performed roadside tests on Woods that seemed to show he was impaired, the sheriff said. Any bodycam video or testimony from the deputies indicating that the golfer had red or bloodshot eyes, displayed slurred speech or smelled like he had been using drugs or alcohol could bolster prosecutors’ cases, according to Hill.
That said, the lack of lab results presents an opportunity for Woods’ attorneys.
鈥淚t’s kind of our bread and butter if there’s nothing scientific, no breath results or urine results to look at,鈥 Hill said.
A second DUI matters
In Florida, Woods would have had a good chance of getting his case dismissed if he hadn’t clipped the other vehicle or if it had been his first offense. First-timers who aren’t involved in an accident are often allowed to go through a diversion program involving education and community service that results in the charges being dismissed. Prosecutors also regularly allow first-time DUI offenders to plead to the lesser charge of reckless driving, Hill said.
But Woods was arrested in 2017 for a DUI. At the time, Woods said he had taken a bad mix of painkillers when authorities found him asleep behind the wheel of his car, the engine still running and its driver鈥檚 side damaged. Woods pleaded guilty to reckless driving.
鈥淚f the person has priors or the case is aggravated for some reason, the prosecutor might be pushing for jail. And those are cases that generally go to trial,鈥 Hill said.
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This story was updated to correct the spelling of John Budensiek’s name.
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Doug Ferguson in Jacksonville, Florida, contributed to this report. Follow Mike Schneider on Bluesky: .
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