Tiger Woods faces trial following a DUI arrest after a car crash in Florida where authorities reported he was driving at high speed. Woods blew triple zeros on a breathalyzer but refused a urine sample.
Legal expert Donna Rotunno explains prosecutors cannot prove impairment due to the zero reading and lack of chemical evidence. The case centers on Woods' refusal to provide a urine sample, which could become the prosecution's strongest argument.
"They'll have a very difficult time with the DUI charge," Rotunno stated. "However, the chemical refusal is where they'll get him."
Woods previously faced DUI charges in May 2017, entering a program and pleading guilty to reckless driving. He received probation and mandatory drug screening.
The arrest occurred March 27, 2026, in Stuart, Florida. Authorities considered the crash severe enough that injury to others could have resulted in harsher charges.