"A lawyer for the man who called 911 to alert authorities to Tiger Woods's car crash early Friday said there was no indication that Woods and his wife were fighting or that drugs or alcohol were involved," The Orlando Sentinel reports.

That attorney, Bill Sharp, is holding a news conference in Orlando this hour. WESH-TV is webcasting the event here (though we haven't been able to get it to play yet; perhaps because demand is overwhelming the feed?).

Sharp has also told reporters, according to the Sentinel, that the neighbors brought pillows and blankets to the scene to make Woods comfortable as he waited for emergency personnel to arrive.

Update at 11:40 a.m. ET: According to the Sentinel, Sharp said his clients — Jerome and Linda Adams — did not see the car accident and did not see Elin Nordegren (Woods' wife) with a golf club in her hand. Police say Nordegren told them she broke the vehicle's back window with the club during her effort to get the vehicle open and help her husband get out.

As NPR's Tom Goldman reported on Morning Edition, Woods has been plunged into the "first major scandal of his life" by the accident and the rumors it has generated about his private life: