The investigation into Tiger Woods’ recent accident is taking a new turn, as authorities shift their focus away from the crash itself and toward what may have happened beforehand.

After declining a urine test following the incident, Woods has not been accused of wrongdoing — but the decision has led investigators to rely more heavily on external evidence, including dashcam footage now under review.

The Footage Before the Crash

According to sources familiar with the case, dashcam recordings from nearby vehicles and street surveillance have captured a sequence of events leading up to the moment Woods got behind the wheel.

Officials have not released specific details, but confirm that the footage is being analyzed for:

His condition prior to driving
The timing of his movements
And whether anything unusual occurred before the accident

“It’s not just about the impact,” one investigator said. “It’s about what led to it.”

A Shift in Focus

While early attention centered on the crash itself, investigators are now reconstructing a pre-incident timeline, using:

Video footage
Witness statements
And digital data

Experts say this approach is standard when certain forms of testing are unavailable.

“When one piece of evidence isn’t there, you build the picture from everything else,” an analyst explained.

No Conclusions — But Growing Scrutiny

Authorities emphasize that no official conclusions have been reached and that the footage alone does not establish fault.

However, they acknowledge that pre-crash behavior can be critical in understanding the full context of an incident.

The Question That Now Matters

As the review continues, the central issue is no longer just how the accident happened —

but what was happening before it.

Because sometimes, the most important answers aren’t found at the moment everything went wrong —

but in the moments that came just before.