The family of Misrach Ewunetie is seeking an independent autopsy for their loved one who was found dead at Princeton University six days after she went missing. As Blavity previously reported, a facilities employee found Ewunetie’s body behind tennis courts at Princeton University on Thursday. Before she disappeared, the 20-year-old student was seen on Oct. 14 at about 3 a.m. near a dormitory building at the New Jersey school.

While prosecutors said there were no obvious signs of foul play in her death, Ewunetie’s family suspects that something suspicious may have happened.

“The area she was found makes us feel it was suspicious,” the student’s brother, Universe Ewunetie, told The U.S. Sun. “Some trees had to be cut when they were removing Misrach.”

Although investigators have conducted an autopsy, the results could take weeks, the New York Post reports.

The family has raised more than $115,000 to cover the cost of funeral expenses and an independent autopsy.

“There are simply no words that can encapsulate the grief and mourning that such an event has brought to Misrach’s family,” the family wrote on the GoFundMe page. “She was the best of us; she had the kindest heart, the sharpest mind, and the most considerate soul. To lose her is just heartbreaking.”

Ewunetie, an undergraduate student, was volunteering at one of the university’s eating clubs before she went missing, The Daily Princetonian reports. The junior was performing housekeeping tasks during a live music performance at the club on that night.

“On Thursday night, one of our members who was initially signed up for duty was unable to attend our event, and Misrach volunteered to cover their shift. After the club had closed and all of the duty responsibilities had been fulfilled, Misrach — as well as the other members on duty — left for the night,” Terrace Club’s student officers said in a statement to The Daily Princetonian.

Universe said his sister was seen at her dorm at 3 a.m. on Oct. 14 before she went missing.

“Her roommates said they saw her at 3 a.m. Then another roommate of hers said she didn’t see her after 4, and then after that that no one has seen her,” Universe told NBC News.

Ewunetie, who came to the U.S. from Ethiopia in 2008 and lived in Ohio, was scheduled for an interview regarding her American citizenship. Universe said he was told that she never showed up.