Dillon Brooks, the Phoenix Suns forward who has been sidelined since late February with a fractured left hand, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence early this morning in Scottsdale, Arizona. He was booked at Maricopa County Jail around 2 a.m. and released by 3:30 a.m.
The arrest came just hours after Phoenix dropped a 105 to 103 decision to the Chicago Bulls, a loss that pushed the Suns to 35 and 27 on the season. Brooks was not in uniform for the game. Police confirmed the stop but have not disclosed the specific reason he was initially pulled over.
A franchise already stretched thin takes another hit
The Suns are holding onto the No. 7 seed in the Western Conference, sitting two games behind the Los Angeles Lakers for the sixth spot. Avoiding the play-in tournament has been the stated priority for Phoenix, but the path is narrowing. Center Mark Williams is also dealing with a foot injury, and the team has leaned heavily on Brooks all season.
Brooks was already expected to miss the remainder of March while recovering from hand surgery he underwent after fracturing it Feb. 21 against the Orlando Magic. He had scored five points in seven minutes before leaving that game and has not returned since.
Brooks having a career year amid the team’s surprising run
The 30-year-old has been one of the league’s genuine surprises this season, averaging 20.9 points, 3.7 rebounds and 1.8 assists per game while shooting 44.0% from the field, 34.3% from three and 85.6% from the free throw line. That production has been central to Phoenix punching above its weight in the West.
Brooks came to Phoenix as part of the trade that sent Kevin Durant to the Houston Rockets, a blockbuster that closed one era for the franchise. The transition has gone better than many anticipated. Brooks is in the third year of a four-year, $86 million contract he signed with Houston in 2023 after being acquired from the Memphis Grizzlies in a sign-and-trade deal.
DUI charge could carry a league suspension for Brooks
If Brooks were to plead guilty, an NBA suspension would likely follow. The clearest recent parallel came in 2023, when Devonte’ Graham pleaded guilty to a DWI charge while with the San Antonio Spurs and received a two-game suspension. Under league policy, a suspended player does not begin serving that suspension until he is cleared to play, which would effectively tack two games onto whatever time Brooks already misses while injured.
The Suns have not released a statement on the matter. Brooks has not publicly addressed the arrest.
Timing compounds an already difficult stretch for Phoenix
For a team that has spent much of this season overperforming expectations, the past few weeks have tested that goodwill. The hand injury arrived at a moment when the Suns needed Brooks most, and Friday’s arrest introduces a new layer of distraction as the playoff race enters its most consequential stretch.
Phoenix’s schedule in March includes several winnable games, but the margin for error in the Western Conference standings is thin. Without Brooks, the offense loses its most reliable individual creator, and the team’s chances of climbing into the top six grow less certain by the week.

