


Newly released documents show the Louisville, Kentucky, officer who arrested professional golfer Scottie Scheffler could have avoided the conflict when he arrested the world’s No. 1 golfer.
According to the Louisville Metro Police Department’s report released Friday, Detective Bryan Gillis “determined Mr. Scheffler was refusing to follow lawful orders from an officer directing traffic, grabbed Mr. Scheffler’s left arm and attempted to open the driver’s door of the vehicle.”
The report adds that Gillis ran “alongside the vehicle briefly while yelling for help before being dragged to the ground,” after which Scheffler stopped his car.
LMPD Lt. Craig Browning said in the report that Gillis was guilty of “tactically poor decision making” by “reaching into a vehicle that is running, is in drive, and the operator has the ability to pull away/accelerate.”
Photos from the report show Gillis sustained a minor scratch to his wrist and ripped pants.
Footage of a phone call Scheffler made from jail shows the golfer wasn’t initially aware Gillis was a law enforcement officer.
“I sat there and tried to diffuse the situation, and then I was literally reaching out trying to find a police officer, not knowing he was one,” Scheffler said. “It’s my fault. I mean, he’s wearing a uniform. He’s wearing a yellow vest. I just didn’t see it.”
The report was released as it was also revealed three of the LMPD officers, including Gillis, present during the arrest initially failed to turn on their body cameras.
Accordingly, there is no body-worn camera footage of the events leading up to Gillis’s run-in with Scheffler.
In Gillis’s body camera footage in the moments after the arrest, Scheffler says, “Are you the one that I dragged? I’m sorry. Sir, I did not know you were a police officer. I’m terribly sorry.”
Gillis responded, “I mean, you hurt my wrist, my ankle, my knee and ripped my pants. … I’m directing traffic. It says police on me.”
Scheffler was arrested at the PGA Championship in May as he attempted to enter the golf course where he was set to tee off. Due to a pedestrian being fatally struck by a bus earlier in the day, some areas of entrance to the course were blocked off. After arguing with the golfer about accessing the course, Gillis arrested Scheffler despite reports that Scheffler was driving a marked player car.
Jefferson County Attorney Mike O’Connell dismissed all charges against Scheffler last month, calling them “a big misunderstanding.”
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
This is not the first time Gillis has failed to conduct himself appropriately as a member of the Louisville police department.
After being briefly suspended in 2013 for having an intoxicated civilian in his police car while doing donuts, he was found to be “at fault” in an accident later that year. In 2019 and 2021, Gillis was orally reprimanded for being “at fault” in accidents. His most recent violation came in June 2021 after he was disciplined for chasing a “vehicle that did not commit a violent felony or wanted on a warrant.”