tre mason.jpg

St. Louis Rams running back Tre Mason carries the ball against the San Francisco 49ers during an NFL game in Santa Clara, Calif., on Jan. 3, 2016.

(AP Photo)

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office had Los Angeles Rams running back Tre Mason taken for evaluation after an officer who responded to a call from his family's home on July 23 determined the former Auburn star did not have the "ability to make decisions at this time."

TMZ Sports obtained the Sheriff's Office incident report of the July 23 call, one of five times that police have been called to Mason's family home since he was arrested during a traffic stop in Hollywood, Florida, almost five months ago.

The police report said Mason's mother made the call on July 23 because of her son's "unusual" behavior and "irrational statements." TMZ Sports said the report indicated Mason said he would call the White House and have the officers fired after they arrived. He also made "bizarre statements about al-Qaida."

The officer filing the report noted Mason's bedroom had a broken vase and lamp and a fist-sized hole in the wall.

Mason had a cut on his hand, but did not want to be treated. The report said Mason was transported anyway for treatment of the laceration and for evaluation. Mason was not arrested.

The Rams put Mason on the reserve/did not report list on Saturday when the running back failed to show up for training camp at the University of California-Irvine. Los Angeles coach Jeff Fisher said the Rams had not been in contact with Mason since the end of the 2015 season.

"Just to give you the background: I haven't personally spoken to Tre since the season ended when we had the checkout physicals," Fisher said at a press conference after the Rams' first practice of training camp on Saturday. "I tried numerous times after the incident to reach him, and I was unsuccessful. Been communicating through the offseason with his agent Bus Cook. Had minimal conversation with family members. But Tre has made a decision not to communicate with us, not to talk. Not talking to his teammates.

"As far as we're concerned right now, we're more concerned about Tre Mason's well-being than we are his football career. We're going to try to continue to reach him to see where he's at. But right now, the best thing for us to do is put him on the did-not-report list."

Mason was arrested on March 5. According to the police report, Mason would not identify himself after being pulled over for going 75 mph in a 35-mph zone, and he would not get out his car when asked to do so. A Taser was used to remove Mason from his car, and he was tased again before being taken to a hospital.

Mason was charged with four misdemeanors -- resisting an officer/obstruction without violence, reckless driving, failure to register a motor vehicle and possession of marijuana in an amount less than 20 grams. Mason also was cited for failure to yield the right of way to an emergency vehicle.

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According to the Broward County Clerk of Courts web site, attorney H.T. Smith Jr.'s motion for a continuance in Mason's case was granted on Thursday.