The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Police could seek blood test and phone records in Woods probe

- By Jamie Johnson

Police investigat­ing Tiger Woods’s horrific car crash in Los Angeles may request a blood sample from the golfing legend to definitive­ly rule out drugs and alcohol being a factor in the accident.

Detectives announced on Wednesday that the crash was “purely an accident” and that they did not anticipate criminal charges being brought against the 45-yearold, but they have been accused of jumping to conclusion­s too early and may now also request his telephone data to see if he was on the phone or otherwise distracted.

Alex Villanueva, the sheriff of Los

Angeles County, said clues about the cause could come from Woods’s wrecked vehicle.

“We’re hoping there’s going to be a black box and we’ll have some informatio­n about the speed,” Villanueva said. “It was maybe a factor in this accident.”

The 15-time major winner, who is still recovering in hospital after an operation on his shattered right leg, could face a low-level charge known as an infraction if investigat­ors conclude that he was speeding or not paying attention.

Joe Giacalone, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice

and a retired New York police sergeant, said it was “premature” for Villanueva to determine the crash was an accident just a day later.

“The blood test could give us a whole other insight,” Giacalone said, noting that some drugs were not necessaril­y detectable by observatio­n. “Because it’s Tiger Woods, people are going to demand answers. You have to dot your I’s and cross your T’s.”

Crash investigat­ions typically include interviews of first responders and bystanders as well as inspection­s of the road and the vehicle, including photograph­ing and measuring the scene and checking to see if the vehicle had defects or malfunctio­ns, according to William Peppard, a retired Bergen County, New Jersey, police detective who has served as a crash investigat­or.

Peppard said in typical cases with no immediate indication­s the driver was impaired, detectives might not seek blood samples if the crash did not injure anyone else or damage property. “Take the celebrity out of it – it’s a matter of resources and time,” he said.

Police have insisted that Woods did not appear to be under the influence of alcohol. “He was not drunk. We can throw that one out,” Villanueva said.

“If there was evidence, we would proceed, and we hold everyone accountabl­e to the rule of law no matter what your celebrity status is. But there was no evidence of that. This is an accident, we’re treating it as an accident.”

 ??  ?? Wrecked: Tiger Woods’s car is removed
Wrecked: Tiger Woods’s car is removed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom