


A boat worker allegedly slapped by Tyreek Hill was offered $200 by the embattled Dolphins receiver in the aftermath of the Miami incident, according to a police report.
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel obtained a supplemental report from the Miami-Dade Police on Wednesday that shed further light on the alleged June 18 assault involving Hill, who is accused of striking a boat employee on the neck after illegally boarding a charter with a group.
Hill, who is entering his second season with the Dolphins after agreeing to a four-year, $120 million deal last March, allegedly told the captain of the charter, who asked the group to disembark: “I can buy you and the boat.”
The “dispute began to escalate,” the police report states, as the boat captain told authorities the 29-year-old Hill “became enraged and attempted to enter the boat to cause him bodily harm but was held back by unknown associates.”
The boat worker approached the scene as the ordeal intensified, which is when Hill allegedly struck the employee on the back of his head and neck.
The employee retreated to the office and was told by a fisherman the person who apparently struck him was “a very famous football player for the Miami Dolphins,” according to the report.
Hill apparently told an “associate” to offer the boat worker $200, the report states, which the worker did not take upon leaving the office.
The boat employee went on to identify Hill as the person who hit him in a photo lineup.
Further, surveillance footage reviewed by authorities “backed up” details provided by the boat captain and employee, the report notes.
The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office offered a statement Monday in regard to the case.
“After all of the evidence has been received and all witnesses have been interviewed and their sworn statement taken, then the evaluation of all evidence can be undertaken in light of the requirements of Florida’s criminal statutes,” the statement read, according to NBC affiliate South Florida 6.