The pathologist who performed Stephon Clark’s autopsy for Sacramento County is disputing the results of an autopsy done at the request of the slain man’s family.

According to the Associated Press, Dr. Gregory Reiber says Clark was shot seven times not eight as Dr. Bennet Omalu's autopsy indicated. Reiber believes the supposed eighth shot is an exit wound.

The location of the bullets also differs between the reports. Reiber’s autopsy reports Clark was shot three times in the right side of his back and once in his right arm, right chest, left thigh and front right side of his neck. It also says two bullets went through the man’s lungs with one hitting his heart and aorta. Another struck his spine.

Omalu's autopsy found six bullets in Clark’s back and one each in his neck and thigh. Omalu says it took Clark three to 10 minutes to die. Police officers on the scene waited five minutes to begin life saving measures.

Based on his findings, Reiber concluded the path of the bullets “do not support the assertion that Clark was shot primarily from behind as asserted by Omalu.”

Instead, Reiber believes Clark was shot as he walked toward officers, who thought he had a gun, prompting them to open fire. The thigh shot is believed to be the first one to hit followed by the right side and back as Clark fell down.

Toxicology results found codeine, cocaine, marijuana and enough alcohol in Clark’s system for him to be considered legally drunk. Those results are considered irrelevant to the ongoing investigation of Clark’s death.

This is the third autopsy conducted in Clark's case; the Sacramento Bee reports that unlike Omalu and Dr. Keng-Chin Su (who conducted Sacramento County's autopsy), Reiber did not actually study Clark's body. Instead, his results were derived from the county's report, diagrams of the scene and body, photographs and police body cam footage.

Clark was shot on March 18 after being chased into his grandparent’s backyard by police officers who received a call about a man breaking into cars. Officers said they thought Clark was approaching them with a handgun or tool bar, but only his cellphone was found at the scene.

There has been no word from the Clark family or their attorney, Benjamin Crump, on the new report.