Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
He's had a lot of back surgeries. For sure his recoveries have turned into addictions. Time to be responsible and hire a full time driver,
since rich guys rarely find recovery.
Or lose your license, as the rest of us would do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
He's had a lot of back surgeries. For sure his recoveries have turned into addictions. Time to be responsible and hire a full time driver,
since rich guys rarely find recovery.
Or lose your license, as the rest of us would do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody is going to give him the benefit of the doubt but it sounds like the back of something like this was sticking out into the road from a driveway. It’s very easy to miss this. And it will easily make you rollover, speeding or not, especially if the back ramp was down.
I could not disagree with you more. No one who is driving in a residential area should be driving so fast or paying so little attention (meaning, not looking at a phone), that they would not easily see and avoid a trailer like this in the road. I don't know if Jupiter, FL is only full of old people, but I know when I'm driving in a neighborhood, I'm constantly scanning for kids and walkers and dogs and whatever.
It's not "very easy to miss this" at all. Give me a break, learn to drive the lethal machine you've been too easily put in charge of.
+1 Plus, he has a history of speeding and reckless driving.
Maybe he was speeding, maybe he wasn’t. Maybe the dumb landscapers are lying and they were parked illegally and endangering local vehicle traffic. Maybe a combination of the two. Either way, doesn’t mean he wasn’t wasted off pills going to or from the golf course at noon on a Friday.
The sheriff literally said he was going at least double the speed limit.
Showboating sheriff. The SUV’s computer will pinpoint the speed. Speeding really isn’t that bit of a deal. Illegally parking a hard to see landscaping trailer is probably more to blame. I say that as someone who lives in a manicured neighborhood where these idiot landscapers illegally park literally 6 days a week. It’s annoying as hell and dangerous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoping an attorney can chime in. Tiger takes the breathalyzer and it shows he was NOT drinking. He then refuses a urine test and he is charged with a DUI.
My questions:
-Was Tiger charged with the DUI because of the refusal? If one refuses, does a judge get involved?
-The police statement said Tiger appeared impaired. Would police be wearing body cameras to prove their point?
-What happens next?
From what I understand it’s a straightforward if/then situation. If you refuse the urine test, then you spend 8 hours in lock up because you can’t prove sobriety. What’s next is likely a he said/she said. They can’t prove he was impaired either. Any impairment viewed could be explained away as effects from the accident by a good attorney. I agree with the tweet a few pages ago- no way in hell would I agree to a urine test if I blew a 0.0. This will go nowhere. He’ll pay a fine or something.
The urine tests should be mandatory.
They (or blood tests) are the only way to prove drug use.
Anonymous wrote:If I was as wealthy as Tiger (or Justin T), I’d hire a driver even if I didn’t have a history of substance abuse and/or reckless driving - I’d be thrilled to let someone drive me around all of the time!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vanessa Trump sure knows how to pick ‘em.
It’s a relationship of convienence obviously. Her daughter Kai is a wannabe golfer.
Vanessa loves them rich, she dated a Saudi prince and a drug kingpin before Trump jr.
Vanessa loves junkies because she’s a washed up party girl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
So what? Most “white collar professionals” in DC have opioids, benzos, amphetamines, and/or SSRIs in their pocket on their way to work.
Anonymous wrote:Elin Nordegren must be thanking her lucky stars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
So what? Most “white collar professionals” in DC have opioids, benzos, amphetamines, and/or SSRIs in their pocket on their way to work.
Do most have the same driving record?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoping an attorney can chime in. Tiger takes the breathalyzer and it shows he was NOT drinking. He then refuses a urine test and he is charged with a DUI.
My questions:
-Was Tiger charged with the DUI because of the refusal? If one refuses, does a judge get involved?
-The police statement said Tiger appeared impaired. Would police be wearing body cameras to prove their point?
-What happens next?
From what I understand it’s a straightforward if/then situation. If you refuse the urine test, then you spend 8 hours in lock up because you can’t prove sobriety. What’s next is likely a he said/she said. They can’t prove he was impaired either. Any impairment viewed could be explained away as effects from the accident by a good attorney. I agree with the tweet a few pages ago- no way in hell would I agree to a urine test if I blew a 0.0. This will go nowhere. He’ll pay a fine or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be woozy after a violent car accident. Doesn’t mean he was on pills.
Okaaay...speeding in a neighborhood isn't safe...you do have concerns for others' safety, right? Tiger clearly doesn't.
I live in a ritzy neighborhood. 99% of the time drivers are doing the speed limit. It’s idyllic. 1% of the time it’s some rich guy a-hole in one of those fast SUVs or a sports car totally disregarding the limit. Tiger isn’t alone in that. Dentists, lawyers and doctors are the guys doing it around our house
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
So what? Most “white collar professionals” in DC have opioids, benzos, amphetamines, and/or SSRIs in their pocket on their way to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
He's had a lot of back surgeries. For sure his recoveries have turned into addictions. Time to be responsible and hire a full time driver,
since rich guys rarely find recovery.
Anonymous wrote:The Secret Service already forbids TW from driving any Trump kids. Because he poses a threat behind the wheel. Which is obvious to anyone with a brain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supposedly he had 2 opioid pills in his pocket at the time of his arrest.
So what? Most “white collar professionals” in DC have opioids, benzos, amphetamines, and/or SSRIs in their pocket on their way to work.