
Until recently, the most pressing question around Tiger Woods was whether he might play in the 2026 Masters.
That changed on Friday afternoon when Woods’ Land Rover SUV flipped on its side after clipping a truck on a residential road in Jupiter Island, Fla. In the wake of that incident, the prospect of him competing at Augusta National seems vanishingly thin.
But another question has emerged: what legal consequences might Woods face?
It is the latest episode in an alarming driving history. On Friday, Woods was charged with DUI, or driving under the influence. That’s the same charge he faced in 2017, when police found him asleep at the wheel of a vehicle parked in the middle of a street in Jupiter. He later pleaded guilty to reckless driving and entered a diversion program as part of his plea deal.
Under Florida law, a DUI arrest triggers immediate administrative action: license suspension, vehicle impounding, and eight hours in jail. Woods has already served that time. He now has 10 days to request a formal review to challenge the suspension of his license.
If convicted of a first DUI, Woods could face fines of up to $2,000, license revocation of between 180 days and one year, and up to nine months in jail. The charges would qualify as misdemeanors, said David Haenel, a former Florida state prosecutor now serving as a defense attorney at The Law Place, a Sarasota-based firm specializing in DUI and traffic-related cases. A felony would only apply if this were a third or fourth offense, or if the crash had caused serious injury or death.
Haenel said any case brought against Woods is bound to hinge on the prosecution’s ability to prove impairment. “Given his past history, I don’t think there’s going to be much denial that there was something in his system,” he said. “The question is, can they connect the dots and prove that he was impaired behind the wheel.”
Like prosecutors, defense attorneys in such cases typically work to build a factual picture: gathering evidence, seeking street camera footage, obtaining body camera video from first responders and dispatching investigators to speak with other drivers involved in the accident. Eyewitness accounts, Haenel noted, can carry significant weight. “Lay people have a lot of clout in these kinds of cases,” Haenel said. “Maybe the driver of the truck would say, ‘Yeah, I was talking to him before the police arrived and he seemed okay to me. He wasn’t slurring his words.’”
Haenel also flagged something unusual about how law enforcement handled the scene. It is highly irregular, he said, for a city police department to call in the county sheriff’s department on a DUI case, as local departments are usually equipped to handle them.
“I think they probably sensed they had a hot potato on their hands,” Haenel said, referring to both Woods’ celebrity and his well-publicized driving history, “so they called in the county,” whose resources include Drug Recognition Experts, specially trained to identify impairment. If he were representing Woods, Haenel said he would subpoena any radio or email communications between officers.
Among the questions, he said, would be whether they knew it was Woods before conducting their assessment, and whether that knowledge influenced their conclusions. “Did they actually see evidence that he was impaired? Or did they assume he was based on what they knew about his past?” Haenel said.
Woods may also face complications from a relatively new Florida statute governing the refusal of a urine test. A first refusal carries an automatic one-year license suspension and up to 11 months and 29 days of jail time.
Woods’ broader driving history could also factor into sentencing, Haenel said. In 2009, Woods struck a fire hydrant outside his Florida home in Windermere in an incident that became a tabloid sensation. In 2021, he was seriously injured when his SUV rolled over on a hillside road in Los Angeles. Though neither resulted in a DUI conviction, Haenel said a prosecutor could point to that record to argue that Woods presents a continuing danger on the road, and push for heftier penalties, additional traffic school and added fines.
Should the charges be reduced to reckless driving, Woods would still be required to complete a Level 2 DUI program, which involves 21 hours of mandatory in-person coursework. A defense attorney could seek to have counseling or a rehabilitation program substituted for jail time.
The case will be heard in Martin County, which Haenel described as being known for its aggressive prosecution of DUI cases. As for how he expects that matter to play out, Haenel said it will boil down to the evidence. “If the prosecutor has a proof problem, they might go with reckless driving,” Haenel said. “If they think they can prove it, they’ll try to get him on DUI penalties.”
It’s unlikely, though, that that question will be settled anytime soon. Cases of this kind typically take six to nine months to be resolved, Haenel said.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: golf.com



