It was no magical world of Disney for Darren Kramer.



The 24-year-old former Ottawa Senators draft pick was arrested early Tuesday after allegedly fighting with a police officer and getting tased for his trouble at Disney World in Orlando, Florida.



Kramer, now with the Winnipeg Jets organization and playing with the American Hockey League’s Manitoba Moose, was arrested and charged with battery of a law enforcement officer, grand theft and resisting arrest without violence.



The officer ended up with torn pants and a bleeding scrape on one knee.



According to a police report from the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, it all began at 1:16 a.m. in the Disney Springs shopping and dining area when an officer spotted a man who identified himself as “Corbin” carrying a large display flag and bowling pins. Corbin returned the flag when asked but maintained the pins were a gift for bowling a high-score game, the report said. However, the bowling alley said they were stolen.



After a standoff in which the officer thought Corbin was going to hit him with the bowling pins, Corbin fled on foot, running past an Irish pub and the Lego Store.



Then, said the report, Kramer was on the scene, running towards the officer and yelling “run, run.” Kramer, who the report pegs at 6-2 and 205 pounds, was allegedly interfering with his attempt to detain Corbin, the officer reported.



The officer started cuffing Kramer, planning to get information on Corbin’s identity, but Kramer pulled away and started yelling “no” when the officer tried to put the bracelet on his second wrist.



The police report alleges Kramer then “violently pulled away” from the officer, pulling him off his feet and raised an arm “as if he was preparing to strike me with a punch.”



Then Kramer head-butted the officer in the chest and both fell to the ground, according to the report. Back on their feet, Kramer again raised his arm, so the officer drew his Taser and yelled he would fire it.



“Kramer continued to come at me and I deployed the ECD, striking him in the upper right arm,” the officer wrote, adding that the suspect – who had slurred speech and smelled of alcohol – then stopped resisting.



Kramer suffered a small cut to his cheek that was bleeding. He waived his rights and agreed to speak with the officer.



A paragraph is redacted from the official police report before it notes Kramer was transported to the Orange County Jail without incident.



On-ice penalties are nothing new for Kramer. He’s been the most penalized player of the year in the Alberta junior league, Western Canada Hockey League and the AHL.



Meanwhile, Kramer’s other claim to fame is inventing a jar billed as a tidy way to get out the last spoonfuls of peanut butter or mayonnaise.



It might take more than that to get him out of this off-ice mess.