A family is outraged after a Border Patrol agent fatally shot a mother in southern California.

Valeria "Munique" Tachiquin Alvarado was killed on Sept. 28 when she attempted to flee authorities and hit a federal agent with her car. The 34-year-old mother of five was shot 10 times with a total of 14 wounds to her upper body.

The autopsy report released Thursday said the cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds and elaborated that some of the shots fired caused more than one wound on her body.

Authorities arrived at the apartment of a friend of Alvarado in Sept. with a felony warrant for a person who was previously deported. The police had no intentions of detaining Alvarado, but she fled the scene in her car after repeated attempts of telling her to stop.

While attempting to leave the scene, she hit one of the nearby agents in the vehicle. Alvarado reportedly drove with 34-year-old agent Justin Tackett on the hood of her 1994 Honda Accord for around 200 yards before he shot her down, according to Yahoo News.

The San Diego County Medical Examiner said that Alvarado's blood had traces of methamphetamines in her system.

A wrongful death claim was filed against the Border Patrol by the family of the deceased mother. The family claims that Tackett should not have been on the case as he allegedly has a long history of misconduct from a previous job in law enforcement.

Eugene Iredale, the attorney for the Alvarado family, cited Tackett's record with four suspensions from misconduct while he served as a deputy for the Imperial County Sheriff's Office.

However, the National Border Patrol Council is backing Tackett who they say was trying to save his life and acted in accordance with necessary actions for the situation.