Tiger Woods.

New details regardingTiger Woods’rollover car crashlast week have surfaced in a Los Angeles County affidavit for asearch warrant of his vehicle’s black box.
“The deputies asked him how the collision occurred. Driver said he did not know and did not even remember driving,” the affidavit reportedly read. “Driver was treated for his injuries at the hospital and was asked there again how the collision occurred. He repeated that he did not know and did not remember driving.”
Woods was also unconscious at some point after the accident, according to the affidavit.
Scene of Tiger Woods' car crash.Splash News

Deputy Johann Schloegl, the traffic collision investigator on the case, wrote in the affidavit that a witness who heard the crash noticed Woods was “unconscious and not responding to his questions” when they first approached the scene of the crash, according to CNN.
The documents said that Woods was conscious when sheriff’s deputies arrived.
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Woods was involved in a single-vehicle crash on the morning of Feb. 23 in the suburb of Rancho Palos Verdes, California.
Woods was traveling downhill when his car struck a sign in the center divider, sheared through a tree and landed in the brush alongside the road with major damage, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
“He was alive and he was conscious, and that’s the extent of that,” Sheriff Alex Villanueva said during a press conference last week. “There was no evidence of impairment.”
Tiger Woods.Rob Carr/Getty

The 11-time PGA Player of the Yearwas then transferred to Cedars-Sinaiwhere he underwent “follow-up procedures,” according to a statement shared on Woods' Twitter page last Friday.
Earlier this week, Villanueva confirmed that that investigators “did a search warrant to seize, in essence, the black box of” the golfer’s car.
“They’re gonna go through it and see if they can find out what was happening at the time of impact, and with that, they’ll have more information [so that] they canattribute the cause of the accident,” he added.
source: people.com