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Tiger Woods Pleads Guilty to Reckless Driving, Will Likely Dodge Jail Time Following Arrest on Suspicion of DUI

Tiger Woods is seen in a booking photo released by the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office.

Tiger Woods pleaded guilty to reckless driving Friday afternoon in court in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, as part of a program that will likely keep him from serving prison time.

Tiger Woods is seen in a booking photo released by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office.

The professional golfer, wearing a suit and with dark sunglasses hanging around his neck, largely remained silent in court. He spoke only to answer “yes” when asked several questions about his plans to plead guilty.

Woods was arrested in Florida on Memorial Day under suspicion of driving under the influence, after police discovered him stopped on the side of the road with his car still running.

Woods, 41, had pain, anxiety and sleeping medications plus THC — a compound found in marijuana — in his system at the time of his arrest on May 29, according to the toxicology report released by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. Shortly after his arrest, Woods released a statement saying he did not realize the mix of medications “had affected me so strongly.”

“I understand the severity of what I did and I take full responsibility for my actions,” Woods said in the statement.

In August, the golfer entered into a DUI first-offender program, under which the state drops the DUI charge and the defendant pleads guilty to the lesser charge of reckless driving.

There is no jail time in the plea deal unless Woods violates probation in a major way, Judge Sandra Bosso-Pardo said in court Friday. The deal calls for 12 months of probation, standard court fees, a $250 fine, $250 charity donation, 50 hours of community service, an online class and completion of DUI school.

Dashcam video released by the Jupiter Police Department shows Tiger Woods’ encounter with police on May 29, 2017.

Completion of the program does not expunge the defendant’s record. Instead, the court withholds the adjudication of guilt, meaning the reckless driving charge will appear on the record but show no finding of guilt.

If the program is not successfully completed, the defendant will have the second-degree misdemeanor on his or her record.

Woods has won 14 major tournaments, second only to Jack Nicklaus. But the former world No. 1 golfer hasn’t won a major since the 2008 US Open and has undergone four back operations in the past three years. He hasn’t played competitive golf since he was forced to pull out of the Dubai Desert Classic in February.

On October 15, Woods posted a video of himself on Twitter hitting a drive with the words “making progress.” According to his agent, Mark Steinberg, doctors have cleared him to “do as much as he needs to do.”

“He got a nice report and is allowed to proceed,” Steinberg told ESPN. “He can do as much as he needs to do. Tiger is going to take this very, very slowly. This is good, but he plans to do it the right way.”

Woods last won on the PGA Tour at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in 2013.

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