FRISCO -- Cowboys receiver Terrance Williams told Frisco Police he wasn't driving his blue Lamborghini that crashed into a light pole Saturday morning and said another NFL receiver had been behind the wheel.

Williams told police "his friend" Kendall Wright, who played with him at Baylor and is now with the Minnesota Vikings, was the one responsible for wrecking his Lamborghini, according to a police report obtained Thursday by The Dallas Morning News.

Williams was arrested early Saturday morning near his home in Frisco and charged with public intoxication, a Class C misdemeanor. He was released later Saturday from the Frisco Detention Center on a $369 bond.

Williams' attorney, Chip Lewis, said Thursday that Wright wasn't driving Williams' Lamborghini. Lewis said Williams had been out with Wright on Friday evening, but Williams was in the car alone when he crashed into a curb.

Terrance Williams’ mugshot after arrest in Frisco for public intoxication. pic.twitter.com/13KWnZbAgL — Kate Hairopoulos (@khairopoulos) May 19, 2018

Lewis said he hasn't viewed the Frisco Police report yet but had talked to Williams and his agent about the accident.

"All I have is what Terrance remembers," Lewis said. "All of that is news to me. Anytime you hit a curve going about 60 mph and struck his head, I don't know, but we're going to find out. I have to do the work necessary when you have an injury like this when you hit your head if there is any head trauma as far as a gap in memory."

The police found Williams' 2017 Lamborghini abandoned after it hit a light pole near Frisco Green Avenue and Lebanon Road, not far from the Cowboys' practice facility, at 4:41 a.m. Saturday. Police determined the car was registered to Williams and went to his nearby home in a gated neighborhood.

Officer Stephen Byrom made contact with the gate attendant in Williams' neighborhood who told the officer he saw Williams come through within the last 10 to 15 minutes as a passenger in another car, according to the police report.

Officer Byrom said in the report that as he began to exit the gated area to drive back to the crash scene he observed a black male, later identified as Williams, driving an electric bicycle onto the 2400 block of Rock Creek Parkway.

Officer Byrom said he saw the Scoot E-Bike "swerving heavily from side to side, then the bicycle stopped suddenly and Terrance was observed falling over the handlebars on the front and onto the ground."

Officer Byrom said he did a welfare check on Williams to determine if he was injured. During Byrom's conversation, he observed the receiver "to have bloodshot and watery eyes, his speech was slurred, and the strong odor of alcohol was detected emitting from his breath as he spoke."

Williams told the officer he was going "literally nowhere, and to pick up his friend." He also said he'd "never put himself in a [messed] up situation where we would be there" and "stated multiple times throughout [the] conversation that he would never put himself in a bad situation and he would not lie to us."

Video released by Frisco Police on Thursday showed Williams slurring his words and rambling.

"This is my $325,000 car," Williams tells officers at one point. "I would never lie to y'all. ... I know for a fact I can't drive. I have nine cars. You can literally drive to my house right now. I don't want to put myself in a bad situation."

Williams told the officer his scooter "had a malfunction and he had just bought it and was trying it out."

Asked what happened to his vehicle, Williams stated "his friend was an idiot and he was driving [his scooter] to see what happened to the vehicle." Williams told the officer he was at his home the "whole time" and Kendall Wright had taken the Lamborghini out at about 12:30 a.m. Saturday on a date. Williams said Wright left the crash scene in a yellow Camaro following the crash and went to a club.

Williams said Wright called him at around 1:45 a.m. to let him know he had crashed the Lamborghini on Lebanon Road.

Photo via Frisco Police Department obtained by The Dallas Morning News

That is a direct contrast from Williams' statement late Saturday from Lewis. Williams said, "The driver in front of me slammed on his brakes and I turned to the left and hopped the curb to avoid him."

A message seeking comment to Select Sports Group, which represents Williams and Wright, wasn't immediately returned.

Lewis also added in a statement Saturday, "Contrary to media reports, Terrance did not hit a light pole and there was no light pole even near the vehicle."

Photo via Frisco Police Department obtained by The Dallas Morning News

However, photos released by the Frisco Police on Thursday show Williams' damaged car and fallen light pole nearby the car and blue pieces of the car's exterior that appear to match the color of Williams' vehicle near the downed light pole. The light pole hit was in the center median, according to a Frisco Police incident report.

"It's my understanding that the impact that Terrance felt was from the curb," Lewis said Thursday. "He didn't have any recollection of hitting a light pole."

During Officer Byrom's questioning of Williams, he asked the receiver if he had his cell phone on him and he told the officer he didn't and it was in the Lamborghini. He then asked Williams how Wright could have called him if his cell phone was in the car. Williams told the officer Wright had called someone at Williams' home to tell him he had crashed the car.

Photo via Frisco Police Department obtained by The Dallas Morning News

"Based on the totality of the circumstances Terrance was believed to be intoxicated in a public place," according to the police report. "He was also believed to be a danger to himself as he had already fallen once from his electric bicycle and was also in the roadway where he could be struck by other motorists."

After Williams was taken into custody and charged with public intoxication, the officer searched his clothes and located the keys to the Lamborghini in his shorts pocket. Those keys were placed into evidence.

The police continue to investigate Williams for fleeing the scene of an accident. No charges have been filed. He could also be charged for striking a structure, fixture or highway landscaping -- a Class B misdemeanor -- because the damage to the light pole was more than $200. According to a Frisco Police incident report, the light pole damaged is valued at $1,000.

Williams' $3.5 million salary in 2018 is guaranteed. He's not practicing with the Cowboys this offseason because of a fractured right foot that required surgery.

Twitter: @DMN_George

More photos from police report

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