According to the report, Gray tested positive for “opiates and cannabinoids” when he was admitted to the Maryland Shock Trauma Center. Gray, 25, died April 19 as the result of a severe spinal injury that occurred when he was taken into police custody a week earlier. Mosby later filed a motion to keep the results of the autopsy secret. An abrupt swerve or braking from the police van carrying shackled Baltimore resident Freddie Gray might have caused a "high-energy injury" that contributed to his death, his autopsy found. Freddie Gray sustained a single "high-energy injury" while in custody of Baltimore Police Department officers, The Baltimore Sun reports, citing Gray's autopsy report. By now, everybody knows the injuries that contributed to Freddie Gray's death. Baltimore authorities and representatives for Gray’s family agree that the 25-year-old sustained fatal trauma to his neck and spine at some point while in police custody following his arrest on April 12.

READ MORE: Baltimore PD officers plead not guilty in Freddie Gray’s death, trial date set. Freddie Gray died when the police van in which he was traveling suddenly decelerated, subjecting Gray to a "high-energy injury," Gray's autopsy shows. A leaked autopsy reports reported by The Baltimore Sun reveals Freddie Gray's injury that caused his death while in police custody. Gray's death was ruled a homicide.