Dr. Russell Vega, who examined the 20-year-old man's body after he was shot and killed last week by an off-duty deputy, said a toxicology screen showed that Spann's blood-alcohol content was 0.216. The level at which a driver is considered intoxicated in Florida is 0.08.
Also, Vega found two bullet wounds, one of them a "contact" wound where the bullet entered his upper torso and was likely fired when the gun was pressed to his flesh.
The bullet, Vega says, traveled through his lung.
A second round was fired several inches to a foot away from the front lower portion of Spann's neck. This bullet traveled through his trachea and lung, and was lodged in the left side of his back, Vega said in an interview with the Herald-Tribune.
"I think you could say that, at no time during the shooting, was the deputy any further than arm's length away," Vega said.