Autopsy results released Thursday show no evidence that Sandra Bland was killed inside her Texas jail cell, officials said.

Waller County sheriff officials said they believe Bland died in her cell the morning of July 13 from asphyxiation with a trash bag, three days after she was pulled over for not using her turn signal and then arrested for allegedly assaulting the state trooper.

The full autopsy report can be found here.

On Thursday, Waller County Assistant District Attorney Warren Diepraam told reporters that there is "no evidence to indicate this is a homicide."

Diepraam added that there were no injures on Bland's hands, face, head or internal organs that would indicate a homicide or violent struggle.

The only injury on Bland's neck was a ligature mark, according to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences, which conducted her autopsy.

Diepraam said the injury was "consistent with a suicide," which her death has been classified as.

Diepraam said the ligature mark around her neck was "uniform and consistent," which would not have been expected "had this been a murder or violent struggle," he said.

She also had lacerations on her wrists, which were consistent with being handcuffed.

There were also superficial abrasions on her back — from her shoulder bone to spine — that were in a "state of healing with scabbing present," Diepraam said. Those marks were consistent with someone applying force against her back, or Bland applying force against an object.

"We don't know who, if anybody, placed their knees on her back," Diepraam said, adding that hypothetically, the injury was consistent with getting kneed in the back. However, "those marks do not reveal who placed them."

A portion of a leaf was found inside the scab, according to the autopsy.

Roughly 30 "cut marks" were also found on Bland's left forearm, which were in a state of healing with scabbing and scarring present. They occurred two to four weeks before she was jailed and were "not indicative of recent inflictions," according to Diepraam.

But LeVaughn Mosley, a friend who Bland called from her jail cell last week, told BuzzFeed News that he did not see any cut marks on Bland's arms when she dropped off her bags at his house the day before she was arrested.

"She was wearing a sleeveless dress and I would have noticed [the cuts], especially since they said there were over 30; that would have been observable," said Mosley, who knew Bland for about 10 years.

Mosley added that the autopsy result showing 30 "cut marks" was "completely fabricated," and questioned why the marks were not documented by Waller County jail officials when Bland was booked.

Like Bland's family members, Mosley said he did not believe she committed suicide, and instead held jail officials responsible for her death.

Bland, he said, was "excited" about her new job and "exhibited no behavior that a suicidal person might." And the last time they spoke, Bland was "hopeful" about getting out of jail, Mosley said.