The family of man run over by a DeLand Police officer on May 8, is speaking out against a medical examiner's report that says there is no evidence that Marlon Brown was struck by the police car -- before his death.

In the report, Brown’s cause of death is listed as mechanical asphyxia, which means he suffocated. The manner of death was ruled an accident. How the incident occurred was listed as the pedestrian (Marlon Brown) being trapped under a moving motor vehicle.

“There is no evidence that he was struck by the vehicle. There were no skull fractures and no fractures of the pelvis or lower extremities,” wrote Dr. Shiping Bao, in Marlon Brown’s special death investigation medical examiner’s report.

“The neck presents an intact hyoid bone…The trachea and anterior spine are in the midline, and present no traumatic injuries or pathological lesions,” Dr. Bao continued in his summary.

However, the Brown family said the funeral director who embalmed Brown's body disagrees.

James Cusack said he has been a funeral director for 40 years. He's not a doctor but he said with his experience he believes Marlon Brown's medical examiner's report is wrong. Cusack said he saw fractures when he embalmed Brown's body.

"I saw an indication that his neck was very loose, where you could move it," said Cusack. "Which to me was an indication there was some contusions, if not a complete break."

Earlier this month, a grand jury decided Officer James Harris would not face any criminal charges in Marlon Brown’s death. But Harris was fired by DeLand Police Chief William Ridgway a few weeks after the incident on May 31.

The medical examiner for Marlon Brown's autopsy was Dr. Shiping Bao. Bao was recently fired by Volusia County, with no exact reason as to why.

Bao gained notoriety because he was the medical examiner for the Trayvon Martin case. During the trial, Bao changed his original opinion on how long Martin lived after he was shot.

"I will say this, at best it was inaccurate and it was done unintentional," said Brown's family attorney Benjamin Crump. "At worst, it was intentional and it was some conspiracy to deceive the truth from this family."

"The medical examiner's report is a lie," said Krystal Brown, Marlon Brown's ex-wife. "It enhances the family's beliefs and feelings that we have been betrayed by our criminal justice system."

Crump said about 2.5 million people have watched the dash cam video and they're calling on the state attorney or the governor's office to authorize an independent investigation into Marlon Brown's death.

Brown’s family has already reached a $550,000 settlement with City of DeLand.  Now they are hoping the dash cam video and contradictions they have presented to the media concerning the medical examiner’s report, will lead to an independent investigation of Brown’s death and vehicular manslaughter charges against now former DeLand Police Officer James Harris.