The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Woods arrested on DUI charge

- By Doug Ferguson

Tiger Woods attributed an “unexpected reaction” to prescripti­on medicine for his arrest on a DUI charge that landed him in a Florida jail Monday for nearly four hours.

Woods, the 14-time major champion who had back surgery five weeks ago, was arrested on suspicion of DUI at about 3 a.m. Monday and taken to Palm Beach County jail. He was released on his own recognizan­ce.

An arrest report might be available on Tuesday, Jupiter Police spokeswoma­n Kristin Rightler said.

“I understand the severity of what I did and I take full responsibi­lity for my actions,” Woods said

said in a statement Monday evening. “I want the public to know that alcohol was not involved. What happened was an unexpected reaction to prescribed medication­s. I didn’t realize the mix of medication­s had affected me so strongly.”

Woods apologized to his family, friends and fans and said, “I expect more from myself, too.”

“I will do everything in my power to ensure this never happens again,” he said.

Woods, whose 79 victories rank No. 2 on the PGA Tour’s career list, has not competed for nearly four months. He is out for the rest of the season while he recovers from fusion surgery on April 20 in Texas.

In an update posted Wednesday on his website, he said the surgery provided instant relief from pain and he hasn’t “felt this good in years.”

Police said Woods was arrested on Military Train, south of Indian Creek Parkway. Woods did not say in his statement where he had been or what he was doing at that hour. Jail records show that the 41-year-old was booked into jail at 7:18 a.m. and released at 10:50 a.m. The jail released a booking photo of Woods in a white T-shirt.

Rightler, the police spokeswoma­n, said she did not have additional details about the circumstan­ces leading to Woods’ arrest, nor did she have any informatio­n about whether the arrest involved drugs or alcohol.

His agent at Excel Sports, Mark Steinberg, did not respond to a voicemail from The Associated Press seeking comment. PGA Tour spokesman Ty Votaw said the tour would have no comment.

Woods said in his statement that he fully cooperated with law enforcemen­t and thanked Jupiter Police and the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office for being profession­al.

Notah Begay, a roommate of Woods when they played at Stanford, was empathetic. Begay was arrested for aggravated drunken driving in 2000 when he ran into a car outside a bar in New Mexico. He was sentenced to 364 days in jail, with all but seven days suspended.

“It’s embarrassi­ng for Tiger, something that you can’t go back and change,” Begay said on Golf Channel from the NCAA men’s golf championsh­ip in Sugar Grove, Illinois, where he was working for the network. “I’ve been there myself . ... But it was a turning point in my life. Hopefully, it’s something he’ll learn from, grow from, take responsibi­lity for and use it to make some changes.”

 ?? PALM BEACH COUNTY SHERIUFF’S OFFICE VIA AP ?? The mugshot of golfer Tiger Woods arrested for DUI early Monday morning in Florida. Woods said it was an “unexpected reaction” to prescripti­on medicine, not alcohol that led to the arrest.
PALM BEACH COUNTY SHERIUFF’S OFFICE VIA AP The mugshot of golfer Tiger Woods arrested for DUI early Monday morning in Florida. Woods said it was an “unexpected reaction” to prescripti­on medicine, not alcohol that led to the arrest.

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