ROBERT Allenby was depressed and visited a strip club prior to passing out and hitting his head on a rock, according to another witness account that contradicts the golfer’s story.

Another homeless man Chris Khamis, 47, has come forward to claim he was there when Allenby hurt himself on Friday night. The golfer has claimed that he was drugged, put in the boot of a car, bashed and robbed after leaving an upmarket bar.
But Khamis told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser that he was with Allenby moments before he injured himself and the golfer seemed depressed about losing in the Sony Open earlier that day. Khamis said Allenby also thought he had been drugged at a strip club where he went to get some “action”.

Khamis said he didn’t actually see Allenby hurt himself because he looked away for a moment but when he turned back around, the golfer was on the ground bleeding.
“There was no crime (when I was present). It was his stupidity,” Khamis said.
“(Allenby) passed out and hit his head. I was there. Nobody pushed him out of a car.”
A spokeswoman for the Honolulu Police told news.com.au that Allenby’s case “continues to be classified as a second-degree robbery and fraudulent use of credit card”. There has been no indication that the police are pursuing Allenby’s allegation of being kidnapped.
She said no arrest had been made so far.

Another man Toa Kaili has also told the Herald Sun that the golfer was “beyond tipsy”.
Kaili said it was only in the last of his three encounters with the golfer on the night that he had a blooded and “busted-up” face.
CCTV footage shows Allenby leaving the Amuse Wine Bar with two men and a woman he met at the club.

Mr Kaili said he first noticed Allenby passed out on the footpath only a block away.
It took him 10 minutes to wake him and another eight minutes for Allenby to stand.
“He was beyond tipsy. This man was blitzed,” he said.
“He then started saying, ‘Where’s the other guy? You gave him the keys; to get the keys.’ I was like ‘Wooh, this dude is beyond having drinks’.”
He said Allenby then turned on him and his friend, Chris, accusing them of robbery after realising his phone and wallet were missing.
An angry Mr Kaili then left.

Two-and-a-half hours later, in the same spot, he again found Allenby, who did not recognise him: “He told us some punks robbed him.”
Mr Kaili says Allenby soon again became convinced he and his friend were robbers, and began searching his bag.
“He kept on saying, ‘You know who I am’. I didn’t care because to me he was a guy passed out on the street and I was trying to help him.”
Mr Kaili said Allenby threw a punch but missed. He left, but his friend stayed with Allenby.

Returning 30 minutes later, this time he found Allenby wiping blood off his face.
Ala Mona Park — where the homeless people sleep and hang out that found Allenby. Picture:
Ala Mona Park — where the homeless people sleep and hang out that found Allenby.

“When I asked, ‘What the hell happened?’, Chris said, ‘I tried to hail him a cab. He was rocking back and forth, nodded off and face-planted into this damn jagged rock’.”
Police, who are conducting robbery and credit card fraud investigations, have interviewed Mr Kaili, who denies any wrongdoing, and are still waiting to interview Chris.
Homeless woman Charade Keane, who got a $1000 reward from Allenby for helping him, was taciturn yesterday.
“I’m tired. I can’t talk about this any more,” she told the Herald Sun.

Robert Allenby: Golfer was ?beyond tipsy? and a victim of ?stupidity?