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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Tiger Woods' Mother-In-Law Rushed To Hospital! The 911 Call



































TMZ's Video of Tiger Woods' Mother-In-Law being rushed to a hospital in Florida and the 911 Call of the incident.
















(Fox Sports) Report: Emergency response at Tiger's house


Orange County Fire and Rescue responded to a call at Tiger Woods' home around 2:30 Tuesday morning, according to several reports out of Orlando.

An unidentified blonde woman was transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital, according to the reports.

According to Orlando's WESH, the adult woman initially refused transport, then was rushed to the hospital "on advanced life support."

There has been speculation the woman is Barbro Holmberg, the mother of Woods' wife, Elin Nordegren. FOX News reports that hospital officials have told them the woman has already been released.

Another blonde woman matching the description of Nordegren, was seen arriving at the same hospital shortly after in a black Escalade similar to the one crashed by Woods last week.

The tag number was reportedly just one digit off that of Woods' Escalade.

This comes on the heels of yesterday's report that a witness told a Florida trooper that Woods had been drinking alcohol earlier in the day before he crashed his SUV, according to a police report. The same witness, who wasn't identified in the report, also said Woods had been prescribed two drugs, Ambien and Vicodin.

The report said the witness who gave police the information also was the one who removed the golfer from his car after the crash. It has been reported that Woods' wife, Elin Nordegren, was the one who helped him out of his car after the accident.

"Impairment of the driver is also suspected due to the careless driving that resulted in the traffic crash," trooper Joshua Evans wrote in the report dated Nov. 30 that was released by the State Attorney General's office.

Woods' attorney, Mark NeJame, didn't return a phone call for comment.

The report says troopers wanted to subpoena Tiger Woods medical records because of the witness' statement, but the State Attorney's Office denied the request, citing a lack of evidence.

In another report released Monday, a police officer who responded to the accident outside Woods' Florida home found two iron golf clubs on the ground and $235 in the vehicle.

The Windermere officer said in a report released Monday that Woods was at first unresponsive, lying on the road covered in a blanket and resting his head on a pillow. The officer, whose name was redacted from the report, said the world's No. 1 golfer tried to stand up before the officer told him to lie down for his safety. The officer used the pillow to immobilize the golfer's spine.

Woods was bleeding from cut lips but was breathing normally. His wife was kneeling over him.

The sport utility vehicle's engine was still running, the front passenger door was jammed and both rear door windows were broken out. The two golf clubs were next to a golf cart, which also was in the road, the report said.

Woods hit a hydrant and a tree around 2:25 a.m. the Friday after Thanksgiving. His wife told police she used a golf club to smash the back windows of the SUV to help him out. The accident -- and Woods' refusal to answer questions about it -- fueled speculation about a possible dispute between the golfer and his wife.

Just days before the crash, a National Enquirer story alleged Woods had been seeing a New York nightclub hostess, Rachel Uchitel, who has denied it. After the crash, Us Weekly reported that a Los Angeles cocktail waitress named Jaimee Grubbs claims she had a 31-month affair with Woods.

Last week, Woods issued a statement saying he had let his family down with unspecified "transgressions" that he regrets with "all of my heart." He did not elaborate.

The officer's report was released Monday in response to state public records requests. It showed the cash was in the center console of Woods' Cadillac Escalade.

Florida Highway Patrol investigators arrived at the scene after Woods had been taken to a hospital, the report said, explaining why they were unable to interview the golfer at the accident site. In the days after the accident, investigators made three attempts to interview Woods, but he refused to meet with them.

The Florida Highway Patrol last week closed its inquiry into the Nov. 27 crash, after fining the golfer $164. Woods was cited for careless driving.






(TMZ) 911 Call to Tiger Woods' House


UPDATE: 7:45 AM ET: Here's what we now confirm as the latest. A middle-aged, blond woman was taken to the hospital early this morning. We have now confirmed the call came from Tiger's address. The spokesperson for Orange County Fire initially said the 911 call came from Tiger's home but for some reason she later backed off that statement and said it might not be the same address. But, it is indeed Tiger's address. We also know a younger blond woman followed the ambulance to the hospital. And, as we reported, Elin's mom is in the U.S. to be with her daughter.

An ambulance reportedly raced to Tiger Woods' block in Windermere, FL overnight -- and transported a middle-aged woman to the hospital ... but there are conflicting reports.

Orange County Fire officials confirm a rescue call came in at 2:36 AM from a home on Deacon Circle. TMZ has confirmed the woman was indeed transported to the hospital.

A person from County Fire tells TMZ the responding address does not sync up with Tiger's home, suggesting it's a neighbor (see update - it was Tiger's address)

But WKMG TV in Orlando is reporting someone was transported (see below) and a blonde woman in a black Escalade followed an ambulance from Deacon Circle to Health Central hospital -- the same hospital that treated Tiger the night of his accident.

The Escalade's vehicle tag is similar to the one that crashed -- and, we know, Tiger has a second Escalade.




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Sources: MSN, NBC Sports, Fox Sports, TMZ, Google Maps

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