Jamon Dumas-Johnson was arrested this offseason for reckless driving and the Georgia linebacker addressed it on Thursday before the media.

Dumas-Johnson, who started all 15 games last season and was the second-leading tackler on the team with 70 tackles, took responsibility for it and said there’s not a culture of racing at Georgia.

“Just taking it day by day,” he said. “For me, I’m definitely disappointed in myself and the decisions I’ve made, I’ve been disciplined for that, just really looking forward to moving on from that. I made a bad decision, and I take full responsibility for what I did. Me and the team? Just take it day by day. Just work to move forward.”

University of Georgia police charged Dumas-Johnson with misdemeanors of racing and reckless driving on the night of Jan. 10 after the team returned from Los Angeles following its second straight national championship. Dumas-Johnson plead guilty in April to reckless driving and the racing charge was dismissed, the Athens Banner-Herald reported.

Dumas-Johnson received 12 months probation and was required to complete a defensive driving course and traffic violators’ impact program, pay a $635 fine and do 40 hours of community service, according to the report.

Since Dumas-Johnson’s incident, there were several similar traffic-related cases involving the Georgia football team.

“[There’s] not no culture about no speeding, mine was before everything hit the Internet and stuff like that,” he said. “I definitely don’t think it’s a culture that we’ve created. Just some bad choices that we’re making right now and hopefully the team will get it together.”