Woods arrested for DUI after crash.
Claimed phone call with "the president."
Pleaded not guilty, seeking treatment.

Atlas AI
Tiger Woods was arrested in Florida on March 27 on suspicion of driving under the influence (DUI) after a vehicle crash, according to officials. Deputies found Woods, 50, after his Land Rover clipped a truck and rolled onto its side on a residential road on Jupiter Island. Authorities said the incident led to a DUI investigation at the scene.
Body camera video released on April 3, 2026, by the Martin County Sheriff's Office shows Woods speaking with a deputy during the stop. In the footage, Woods told the deputy he had been speaking with “the president” before the arrest, though the identity of the person he referenced was not confirmed. Officials did not provide additional details in the material described.
Deputies said Woods told officers he had been distracted by his phone and radio. After a roadside sobriety test that officials said he failed, Woods was handcuffed and transported. During the ride, he appeared disoriented, according to the account tied to the footage and the arrest description.
Woods later said he had not consumed alcohol, but stated he was taking prescription medication. Officials said Norco, a painkiller containing hydrocodone, was found in his possession. Woods agreed to a breathalyzer test that showed no alcohol, officials said, but he refused a urine test; under Florida law, refusing a urine test is a misdemeanor.
In court proceedings referenced in the source material, Woods pleaded not guilty to the DUI charge on April 1. After the arrest and subsequent developments, Woods announced he would be stepping away from golf indefinitely to seek treatment for his health. The announcement framed his decision as focused on treatment, without further specifics provided in the source.
The case combines a high-profile sports figure with a law-enforcement process that includes video evidence, field testing, and chemical testing decisions. Officials have not confirmed who Woods meant by “the president,” leaving that element unresolved in the public record described. Separately, the breathalyzer result showing no alcohol and the refusal of a urine test are central factual points that may shape how the matter proceeds.
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