Tiger Woods confused, stumbling on dashcam video

His speech slow and slurred, Tiger Woods couldn't follow simple instructions or keep his balance during a dazed and disoriented encounter with police before he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence.

Tiger Woods

Golfer Tiger Woods stands between two police officers in Jupiter Florida. Source: Jupiter Police Department

The video images came from dashcam footage released Wednesday night, and they show Woods with little capacity to stand still without swaying, repeat simple instruction or put one foot in front of the other.

The footage came from his arrest Monday in the dark of early morning when Jupiter police noticed his Mercedes parked on the side of a six-lane road, part of it in the road and part of it in the bicycle lane.

Police found the Woods sound asleep behind the wheel, according to an incident report. The engine was running, the brake lights were on and the right turn signal was blinking. Police also released photos of his car that showed both tires flat and minor damage around the bumpers.

When the officer asks Woods where he had been, the 14-time major champion says, "LA". He says he was headed down to Orange County.

The 99-minute video starts with Jupiter police approaching Woods' car and ends with the cruiser pulling into the Palm Beach County jail, with Woods in handcuffs behind his back and sitting in the back seat.
The video brings to life the troubling images contained in an incident report from the four police officers who were at the scene.

His speech is slurred from his first words. When the officer points out that Woods' shoe is untied, Woods places his right foot on the front of the police car and starts to fiddle with the laces.

"It's your other shoe that's untied," the officer says as Woods unties the laces.

"Now that one is, too," the officer adds.

When Woods is unable to tie the left shoe, the officer tells him he can take them off. Woods then tells the officer he doesn't remember what happened or being asleep in his car when police approached.

The field sobriety test was a failure from the start.

Woods struggled to simply put his feet together. When he did, he leaned forward after losing his balance.

He couldn't follow a red light the officer moved from side to side. When asked to walk a straight line by going heel-to-toe nine times, Woods staggered from the starting position. He never connected heel-to-toe. He often strayed outside the white line and occasionally lost his balance.

Woods couldn't raise one leg six inches off the ground.

On his third try of understanding instructions to recite the alphabet, he made it from A to Z.

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3 min read

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Source: AP



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