Houston Chronicle

Woods to plead guilty to reckless driving, enter diversion program

- By Terry Spencer Tiger Woods will likely receive a one-year probation sentence.

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Tiger Woods has agreed to plead guilty to reckless driving and will enter a diversion program that will allow him to have his record wiped clean if he completes it, a prosecutor said Wednesday.

Woods, 41, was charged with driving under the influence in May, when he was found asleep in his Mercedes-Benz, apparently under the influence of a prescripti­on painkiller and sleeping medication. No alcohol was found in his system.

Woods did not appear at the Palm Beach County courthouse for his arraignmen­t. Prosecutor Adrienne Ellis said the golf superstar agreed to plead guilty at an Oct. 25 hearing and enter the county’s program for first-time DUI offenders.

“He is not being treated any different than anyone else,” Ellis said.

Woods’ attorney, Douglas Duncan, entered a not guilty plea to the DUI charge on Woods’ behalf and declined comment as he left the courthouse.

Under the plea deal, prosecutor­s would drop the DUI charge, which is a more severe charge than reckless driving. If he completes the program, he can ask a judge to expunge the reckless driving conviction.

In the diversion program, Woods will spend a year on probation, pay a $250 fine and court costs, attend DUI school and perform 50 hours of community service. He would also have to attend a workshop where victims of impaired drivers detail how their lives were damaged and face other conditions. Since the program began four years ago, almost 2,400 defendants have enrolled, according to the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office.

If convicted of DUI, Woods would have faced a fine of between $500 and $1,000, had his car impounded for 10 days and other conditions. He also could have been jailed for up to six months, although that was unlikely, received probation and lost his driver’s license for six months to a year.

The DUI arrest was the first time Woods had been in trouble since Thanksgivi­ng weekend 2009, when he plowed his SUV into a tree and a fire hydrant outside his then-Windermere, Fla., home.

That led to revelation­s that he had multiple extramarit­al affairs and a divorce from his wife, Elin Nordegren, the mother of his two children. He spent 45 days in a Mississipp­i clinic, where he was treated for sex addiction.

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