The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Police keep lid on details of Tiger’ s crash

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Los Angeles County sheriff says detectives have determined what caused Tiger Woods to crash his car last month but are refusing to make the details public.

Woods suffered serious injuries in the crash on February 23 when his car crossed two oncoming lanes and uprooted a tree on a downhill stretch that police said is known as an accident blackspot.

Woods is in Florida recovering from multiple surgeries.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva has been criticised for his comments about the crash, calling it “purely an accident” and saying there was no evidence of impairment.

Woods told deputies he did not know how the crash occurred and did not remember driving.

Investigat­ors did not seek a search warrant for Woods’ blood samples, which could be screened for drugs and alcohol.

In 2017, Woods checked himself into a clinic for help in dealing with prescripti­on drug medication after a DUI charge in his home state of Florida.

Detectives, however, did obtain a search warrant for the data recorder of the 2021 Genesis GV80 SUV, known as a black box.

Mr Villanueva would not say what data had been found in the black box.

“A cause has been determined, the investigat­ion has concluded,” Mr Villanueva said during a live social media event.

But Mr Villanueva claimed investigat­ors need permission from Woods – who previously named his yacht Privacy – to release informatio­n about the crash.

“We have reached out to Tiger Woods and his personnel,” Mr Villanueva said.

“There’s some privacy issues on releasing informatio­n on the investigat­ion so we’re going to ask them if they waive the privacy and then we will be able to do a full release on all the informatio­n regarding the accident.”

Mr Villanueva’s statement about privacy issues did not make sense to Joseph Giacalone, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a retired New York City Police Department sergeant, who has criticised the sheriff ’s response to the Woods incident from the outset.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a department ever ask for permission like that,” he said.

“What happens if his lawyers say ‘no, you can’t send it out now’. And then where does that leave us?”

Mr Giacalone said it is unlikely that deputies would have sought the permission of non-celebrity victims in similar crashes to release informatio­n.

If the sheriff’s hesitancy stemmed from a potential medical episode behind the wheel, Mr Giacalone said, authoritie­s could simply say it was a medical emergency without giving additional details.

 ??  ?? LUCKY ESCAPE: Tiger Woods, inset, suffered multiple injuries in the crash last month.
LUCKY ESCAPE: Tiger Woods, inset, suffered multiple injuries in the crash last month.

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